When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Synapsida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synapsida

    The early synapsids spread and diversified, becoming the largest terrestrial animals in the latest Carboniferous and Early Permian periods, ranging up to 6 metres (20 ft) in length. They were sprawling, bulky, possibly cold-blooded, and had small brains. Some, such as Dimetrodon, had large sails that might have helped raise their body temperature.

  3. Physiology of dinosaurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiology_of_dinosaurs

    They were warm-blooded, more like modern mammals or birds than modern reptiles. They were neither cold-blooded nor warm-blooded in modern terms, but had metabolisms that were different from and in some ways intermediate between those of modern cold-blooded and warm-blooded animals. They included animals with two or three of these types of ...

  4. Dicynodontia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dicynodontia

    Dicynodonts have long been suspected of being warm-blooded animals. Their bones are highly vascularised and possess Haversian canals, and their bodily proportions are conducive to heat preservation. [9] In young specimens, the bones are so highly vascularised that they exhibit higher channel densities than most other therapsids. [10]

  5. Study reveals when the first warm-blooded dinosaurs ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/did-dinosaur-blood-run-hot-150006870...

    Dinosaurs were initially cold-blooded, but global warming 180 million years ago may have triggered the evolution of warm-blooded species, a new study found.

  6. When the first warm-blooded dinosaurs roamed Earth

    lite-qa.aol.com/news/world/story/0001/20240515/...

    Cold-blooded animals, including reptiles like snakes and lizards, depend on outside sources to control their temperature: For example, basking in the sun to warm up. Knowing when dinosaurs evolved their stable internal thermometer could help scientists answer other questions about how they lived, including how active and social they were. To ...

  7. Researchers discover most dinosaurs were warm-blooded - AOL

    www.aol.com/researchers-discover-most-dinosaurs...

    But scientists observed differences between the two big groups of dinosaurs, finding that Triceratops were cold-blooded and T-Rex warm-blooded.

  8. Dimetrodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimetrodon

    Dimetrodon (/ d aɪ ˈ m iː t r ə ˌ d ɒ n / ⓘ [1] or / d aɪ ˈ m ɛ t r ə ˌ d ɒ n /; [2] lit. ' two measures of teeth ') is an extinct genus of non-mammalian synapsid belonging to the family Sphenacodontidae that lived during the Cisuralian age of the Early Permian period, around 295–272 million years ago.

  9. Warm-blooded - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warm-blooded

    Warm-blooded is a term referring to animal species whose bodies maintain a temperature higher than that of their environment. In particular, homeothermic species (including birds and mammals ) maintain a stable body temperature by regulating metabolic processes.