There are 10 meters in 1000 centimeters.
There are 13.05 feet in 3.98 meters.
There are 1,000 meters in a kilometer.
120,000 meters.
500
Brontosaurus is an invalid name for Apatosaurus excelsus. Apatosaurus excelsus was about 75 feet, or 23 meters long, and about 15 feet, or 4.5 meters tall to the highest point on the back.
"Bully for Brontosaurus" by Stephen Jay Gould has approximately 480 pages.
Brontosaurus is an invalid name for Apatosaurus excelsus. Apatosaurus excelsus was about 4.5 meters tall, or 15 feet tall, at the highest point on its back. It is unknown what angle they held their necks at, so nobody knows how high above the ground their heads were.
There is no such thing as Brontosaurus since it was just an Apatosaurus with a Camarosaurus's skull accidently placed on the body of the former,so anyway Brontosaurus/Apatosaurus was 90 feet long and possibly much longer
Brontosaurus was an herbavore therefor it does not hunt. However Brontosaurus does move and graze in herds.
Brontosaurus is now known as apatosuarus.
Brontosaurus is an invalid name for Apatosaurus excelsius. Apatosaurus grew to be 18 to 25 tons, or 36,000 to 50,000 lb.
There was no dinosaur named Brontosaurus. The name Brontosaurus was given when fossils from 2 different Sauropod dinosaurs, bones from an Apatosaurus and the skull of Camarasaurus were mixed up. The Apatosaurus is estimated to be up to 26 meters in length (23 average). The Camarasaurus is estimated to be up to 23 meters in length.
Bully for Brontosaurus was created in 1991.
Brontosaurus lived during the Jurassic Period
Brontosaurus is an invalid name for Apatosaurus excelsus. Apatosaurus excelsus was about 4.5 meters tall, or 15 feet tall, at the highest point on its back. It is unknown what angle they held their necks at, so nobody knows how high above the ground their heads were.
In 1903, Elmer Riggs reclassified Brontosaurus. He realized that Brontosaurus was too similar to Apatosaurus ajax to belong to a separate genus. Thus, he reclassified Brontosaurus to Apatosaurus excelsus in 1903, and at that point the name Brontosaurus became dubious.