yes they are they both are 13to14 feet tall
It is thought that wooly mammoths behave much like their cousins, elephants. There are fossil records that show that they have the same social organization.
Acording to what i have heard it is said that the woolly mammoth would be about twice the size of an African elephant.
I believe you are referring to bison. Yes, bison and their Eurasian counterpart wisent did exist at the same time as mammoths. In fact, they coexisted in many of the same areas.
They both are animals that eat grass
Yes, because a Mammoth is bigger than one. Mastodons are about the same size as Mammoths.
Elephants are mammals, they do not lay eggs. If elephants are descendants of the woolly mammoth, or they share the same genetic ancestor, scientists may consider playing with the DNA in an elephant egg cell to bring out the traits of the woolly mammoth.
Woolly mammoths belong to the genus Mammuthus, the same genus as other mammoths. That genus is part of the family Elephantidae, and that is part of the order Proboscidea. Proboscidea is part of the class Mammalia.
I'm not sure about plants, but animals that lived at the same time as the saber toothed cat would be: Terror birds, early humans, woolly mammoths, woolly rhiocerous. ~ ~Sleenky
No elephants live in North America. Unless you mean the ones in the zoos. The Mastodons (AKA Woolly Mammoths) died out long ago, but the museum at the Los Feliz tar pits has a collection of their fossilized remains found here, on the continent. That same museum aslo has the largest collection of saber-toothed tigers, by the way.
Here are three examples of mammoth: 1. The Songhua River mammoth, which is the second largest terrestrial mammal ever known to have lived. They were 17 ft tall, 30 ft long, and weighed 19 tons. 2. Woolly mammoths, which are about the same height as an Asiatic elephant. Woolly mammoths are native to Siberia, northern Europe, and Alaska. 3. Columbian mammoths, which are a mammoth native to North America.
If you are religious then yes. The Bible says God created everything in 6 days. So, I'm pretty sure dinosaurs or mammoths didn't die in 6 days. :) But if you look at fact, No, They lived millions of years apart from each other, and we know this from carbon dating fossils and the frozen remains of mammoths.
Their extinct, but when alive they ate the same things as moden day elephants. Branches from trees, bushes, some grass.