Evidence suggests that they originally evolved in the tropical environment of a super continent nowhere near the poles (that's why you find them on every continent now), in a climate so warm that to be ektothermic was no disadvantage. The disintegration of that continent, and exposure to colder climates later on turned some subspecies warm blooded, encouraged the growth of feathers, brooding, and upbringing. Only eight different species of dinosaur fossils have been found on Antartica so far, none of them younger than 100 million years. When it started to get real cold. No problem for todays population of warm-blooded birds and mammals.
The only family of animals with a more complete fossil record than dinosaurs is even far older, trilobites. Almost 50,000 species have been identified.
What you're missing is that those species of dinosaurs living near the poles lived in ecosystems that were, as far as the fossil record shows, devoid of ectoterms like crocodiles, turtles, etc. This is highly suggestive that the environment was too cold for contemporary non-avian reptiles but not too cold for dinosaurs. The fact that dinosaurs but not "reptiles" could live in these high latitudes is suggestive of the fact that they were in fact warm-blooded to some degree.
Comes up with a message that it won't play outside the UK.This is a new spin on the current knowledge of the masses
T-Rex + Pterodactyl = Dragon.
Though I have to say, its odd that the animation looks less convincing than Walking With Dinosaurs that came out nearly twelve years ago.
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