honestly it was more of the humans fault for their extinxion because they killed the mammaths for food and fur. the weather did effect them because they had long heavy coats that would make them overheated, and the weather created muddy swamps and such so mammaths often got stuck in them.
Humans may have hunted the slowly-reproducing mammoths for their meat and fur, much in the way their descendants, the elephants, were slaughtered for their ivory. Other animals, such as the sabretooth, were also predatory on mammoths. However, it is still unclear to what extent hunting contributed to their decline, since there were vast areas of their ranges that were uninhabited by man.
Because the wooly mamooth was in the time of the dinosaurs so when the meteor hit he was extinced like the dinosaurs
food
It is the fate of most living things eventually to go extinct. standard commonplace rate of extinction not associated with a mass extinction.
new predators new disease new climate or environment change new competitors for food or land these all contribute to extinction
humans make the most extinctions. we make polutions and kill by just standing by to let others kill and we should stop that
The Permian mass extinction occurred about 248 million years ago and was the greatest mass extinction ever recorded in earth history exterminating more than 95% of all life on EarthTwo theories have been proposed - the impact of a huge meteorite or comet over 10 kilometres in diameter, or a massive and prolonged volcanic eruption. The volcanic theory appears to be taking the lead at the present time.
As the world got warmer the woolly mammoth habitat decreased their source of food and as the human population grew the more hunters their was around to hunt the mammoths so that could drove the last of the mammoths to extinction
No. They became extinct about 10,000 years ago and humans may have been one cause.
The woolly mammoth is extinct, therefore this question is irrelevant.
4,000 years ago New DNA research shows the world got too wet for the giant animals to survive. Summary: Humans did not cause woolly mammoths to go extinct climate change did. For five million years, woolly mammoths roamed the earth until they vanished for good nearly 4,000 years ago and scientists have finally proved why.
Early humans hunted mammoths and are thought to have been a major cause of their extinction although there is no definitive proof.
The main cause is: HUMANS
What? extinction is the total annihilation of a species. In terms of humans, if there were no males or females left to reproduce with, that would ultimately cause our extinction.
Of course humans cause animals to go extinct
habitat destruction by humans.
The Problems that humans cause ex...tree reduction, animal extinction
Deforestation, Increased Human Population, Pollution, and Global Warming.
The extinction of animals is caused by humans killing animals. Extinction of animals may also be caused by pollution or forest fires that are killing off the plants and trees.