Older than dinosaurs? 5 prehistoric-era animals that still walk the Earth today

5 prehistoric-era animals that still walk the Earth today
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5 prehistoric-era animals that still walk the Earth today


When we think of prehistoric life, most of us picture dinosaurs, fossils, or something locked away in a museum. But not everything from that era disappeared.

Some animals didn’t just survive – they stayed. Quietly, almost unnoticed, through millions of years of change. Ice ages came and went, species vanished, landscapes shifted… and these creatures somehow kept going.

Here are five animals that still exist today, even though their origins go back to prehistoric times.

Images: Canva (for representative purposes only)

Horseshoe crab: a creature older than dinosaurs
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Horseshoe crab: a creature older than dinosaurs




It’s easy to miss them if you spot one on a beach, but horseshoe crabs are among the oldest surviving species on Earth.

They’ve been around for more than 450 million years – which means they existed long before dinosaurs. What’s strange is how little they’ve changed. Their shape, their structure, and even their behaviour is almost the same as what scientists see in ancient fossils.

They’re often called “living fossils,” and in this case, it actually makes sense.

Komodo dragon: a reptile that looks like it belongs in another era
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Komodo dragon: a reptile that looks like it belongs in another era


There’s something about the Komodo dragon that feels… ancient.

Maybe it’s the way it moves, or the fact that it’s the largest lizard alive today. Found in Indonesia, this reptile carries traits that go back millions of years. It’s not just its size – even its hunting style feels primitive, slow but calculated.

It doesn’t take much imagination to picture it in a completely different time.

Coelacanth: the fish that wasn’t supposed to exist anymore
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Coelacanth: the fish that wasn’t supposed to exist anymore



For a long time, scientists believed the coelacanth had gone extinct with the dinosaurs.

Then, in 1938, one was found alive.

That discovery alone made headlines around the world. Even today, the coelacanth feels unusual – almost like something that doesn’t belong to this time. Its fins look almost like limbs, and it lives deep in the ocean, far from where most people would ever see it.

It’s one of those rare cases where something thought to be gone… simply wasn’t.

Alligator: built the same for millions of years
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Alligator: built the same for millions of years


Alligators have been around for roughly 150 million years. That’s a long time – and yet, they haven’t changed much.

Their bodies, their hunting style, even the way they move through water – it’s all very similar to what existed during the age of dinosaurs. In a way, that says something about how well they were built to survive.

Watch one glide through water, and it doesn’t feel modern. It feels old. In a very real way.

Nautilus: surviving quietly in the deep sea
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Nautilus: surviving quietly in the deep sea



The nautilus doesn’t get as much attention, but it probably should.

This deep-sea creature, with its spiral shell, comes from a lineage that goes back around 500 million years. Unlike squids or octopuses, which evolved further, the nautilus stayed more or less the same.

It moves up and down in the ocean using gas-filled chambers in its shell – a simple system that’s worked for millions of years.

And it still does.



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