Yes. A large pack of saber-tooth tigers often hunt and kill a woolly mammoth out of defense and prey to eat if the woolly mammoth is alone. They work together to kill the woolly mammoth by stabbing their fangs and clawing the woolly mammoth down.
A mammoth can kill a saber tooth cat easily. But only a pack or the mammoth is in a tar pit will be killed by saber toothed cats. A 11 ton, 14 ft tall Columbian Mammoth would kill 2 or 3 saber tooth cats easily.
This really depends on a number of factors. A fully grown mammoth would probably have no problems killing a sabertooth, owing to their much greater size and strength... Calves and immature mammoths, however, are a different story, and sabertooths probably preyed on these at least on occasion (assuming they could get past the adults, that is). Certainly, the smaller scimitar-toothed cats (Homotherium) are known to have preyed on juvenile mammoths on a regular basis. In a one on one fight, though, even a large and powerful sabertooth such as a Smilodon would probably stand little chance against an adult mammoth, and it's unlikely that such mammoths would have been preyed upon, especially considering that current theories of sabertooth predation say that these cats would first have to wrestle and pin down their prey before delivering the killing bite with their saber teeth, which would've been all but impossible against a gigantic mammoth, but then again, one never knows...
Up until fairly recently, it was general consensus that adult African elephants were essentially invulnerable to predation, owing to them being so much larger than any predator in Africa... that is, until large prides of lions were filmed attacking and actually bringing down fully grown elephants in the wild. If sufficiently large (and bold) prides of lions can overcome an adult elephant, then perhaps a pride of sabertooths could succesfully bring down and kill an adult mammoth. This, of course, hinges on the sabertooths actually having been social cats that lived in prides as lions do, which is speculative at best... but it's a tantalizing possibility, to be sure.
It's virtually certain that they could, just as a fully grown elephant can easily kill a lion, should the need arise (perhaps in defense of calves). Some saber toothed cats were very large and powerful, but most mammoths were far larger and stronger than even the biggest sabertooths, and could impale them with their tusks, trample them or just crush them underfoot.
Definitely. A woolly mammoth has the strength and muscles to defeat a whole pack of saber-tooth tigers without painfulness.
Yes. A cave bear could even kill a pack of saber tooth tigers.
It depends on the type of dinosaurs. Most of the smaller ones it could probably kill, but not the largest ones.
no
Yes, an ox can kill a tiger if it was able to gore the tiger with its horns.
Tiger sharks grow larger, and a big one could kill a large bull shark.
because it could kill or seriously injure you
No. Australopithecus was a herbivore, and died out before the first Mammoth.
Don't kill them.
Five unarmed large men with good wrestling and kung-fu skills could kill a tiger.
No. A Jaguar is a large animal but a tiger is usually bigger than a jaguar. Hence the tiger would be able to defend itself.
The rhino. It could easily kill the tiger with its sharp horn. If the tiger tries to attack from behind, the rhino would kick it off.
Stone age hunters used a variety of methods to kill the Woolly Mammoth. The weapons they used depended on which method they chose to use. One method used by Mammoth hunters was the pit trap. The hunters dug a deep hole in the earth, and chased the mammoth past the pit hoping one would fall in. If one did fall in, then it probably died from the fall. Another method chosen by the hunters was to chase the herd of mammoth over a cliff. Again, the mammoth probably died from the fall. Another method used by the hunters was to circle around the mammoth and goad it into charging one of the hunters. When the mammoth charged the hunter, the other hunters would throw spears at the mammoth or try to cut the hamstrings on the mammoth's legs. If they were successful at cutting the tendons in it's legs, then they could get close and stab the mammoth with spears.
Yes, if the cave bear attacked the woolly mammoth on the side or back.
it is unlikely that a tiger beetle can kill you.but if many tiger beetles attack you,you could die.