If birds are dinosaurs, why aren’t they cold-blooded?

For over a hundred years, researchers have assumed this dinosaurs were like giant lizards: sluggish reptiles that basked in the sun most of the day. This view changed when we started to realize that dinosaurs were much more similar birds than for modern lizards. Today, researchers agree birds are technically dinosaurs – the only ones to survive the mass extinction 66 million years ago. But if that’s true, why aren’t birds cold-blooded like most modern-day reptiles?

The answer is simple: most dinosaurs were probably warm-blooded too.

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