I don’t think anyone has actually answered this. Either tangent facts or guesses. But the real answer? We don’t really know. There’s some theories…
“Paleontologists don’t know for certain, but perhaps a large body size protected them from most predators, helped to regulate internal body temperature, or let them reach new sources of food (some probably browsed treetops, as giraffes do today). No modern animals except whales are even close in size to the largest dinosaurs; therefore, paleontologists think that the dinosaurs’ world was much different from the world today and that climate and food supplies must have been favorable for reaching great size.” https://www.usgs.gov/faqs/why-did-some-dinosaurs-grow-so-big#:~:text=Paleontologists%20don’t%20know%20for,%2C%20as%20giraffes%20do%20today).
I think it’s almost important to understand there wasn’t just one dinosaur age. They are believed to have existed for 165-245 million years. We, for example, have existed for about 300,000 years as homo sapiens and the genus homo has existed for up to 2 million years. So the dinosaurs were around for 100x longer than our earliest ancestors existed. Not to mention there were dinosaur-like ancestors before they were “dinosaurs”. There’ve been multiple mass extinctions in Earth’s history that have wiped out almost life on earth and what does comeback is different from previous species with new adaptions for surviving the new world.
Another interesting note about prehistoric gigantism is that oxygen levels affected the size of insects. The are points in history where prehistoric insects were much larger and it’s primarily because the oxygen level was higher than modern day. This is not necessarily true for all species, but insect size is greatly affected by oxygen in the atmosphere.
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