Dilophosaurus did not spit. Jurassic Park may have shown that but Jurassic Park's Dilophosaurus was completely false. When Dilophosaurus was discovered he was 20 feet long and he did not have a frill. There is no proof that he spit poison. Dilophosaurus was probably warm blooded and may have weighed 1,000 pounds.
Dilophosaurus did not spit. Jurassic Park may have shown that but Jurassic Park's Dilophosaurus was completely false. When Dilophosaurus was discovered he was 20 feet long and he did not have a frill. There is no proof that he spit poison. Dilophosaurus was probably warm blooded and may have weighed 1,000 pounds.
No, they do not have a frill or the ability to spit poison.
1.Neither the frill or poison would fossilize
2.It only shows the frill and poison in Jurassic Park
3.Now that some people saw the poison and the frill,they start to make videos and toys of Dilophosaurus with a frill and poison (e.g. Screature,JP dilophosaurus toy)
What dinosaur use to eat Dilophosaurus dinosaurs
Ever since Jurassic Park, many people have thought that the Dilophosaurus (meaning double-crested lizard) was a three-foot-tall dinosaur that had rather large, retractable neck frills that would puff out whenever it felt threatened by something and spat blinding poison that looked like a black or a very dark brown tar-like substance. Michael Crichton, the author of Jurassic Park, just sized it down a little so the audience would not get confused with the Velociraptors. To tell you the truth, there is not much evidence about the neck frills. However, it did spit, but it did not spit blinding poison of any kind. I am not very sure of what it spat, though. It is possible that it may have had some sort of special instinct with its spit glands. Ours are located under our tongues, as you can see, if you gather some spit, you may notice that it feels like it is coming from under your tongue, but maybe the Dilophosaurus had its spit glands in a different spot than ours. In that case, it is not poisonous, but if you mean poisonous by touch, no, it was not poisonous.
Camels do not spit unless they are agitated or upset, and they really don't spit at all because what they spray is not saliva.
ANSWER. We have no idea if any dinosaurs or Pterosaurs spat venom. As reptiles it would be sensible to think that a few dinosaurs/pterosaurs had venom and used it in some way. Either by injecting through bites or spitting or merely in breaking down foods. Fossil records cannot show whether an animal has venom or not. The Komodo dragon's saliva is toxic and thus does not need special teeth to use the venom. Some dinosaurs or Pterosaurs would probably have had venom. -------------------------------- There isn't one. Spitting venom may be a characteristic of some reptiles today, but if you're thinking of the one from "Jurassic Park", it does NOT have a frill around its neck, and did NOT spit acid. It's name was "Dilophosaurus".
no
Dilophosaurus is a singular noun. In scientific terminology, the suffix "-saurus" is used to indicate a singular dinosaur species. The term "dilophosaurus" refers to a specific genus and species of dinosaur, not multiple individuals.
No.
Dilophosaurus is as tall as you! (Except if you are still alive as Robert Wadlow!)
dilophosaurus
dilophosaurus
the spit is something that the tudors used to cook there food the spit was usually given to a tudor child you really wouldn't want to be a child in tudor times
Fossils