No it is not possible, once they're extinct they can't come back.
Humans. That's really it. Some people think saber tooth tigers were enemies of wooly mammoths. They probably did attack baby mammoths, but not a full grown one. A pack of saber tooth tigers probably couldn't even bring one down. Keep in mind: mammoths were even bigger than the modern day elephant. While modern cats bite the throat, this tactic doesn't work on elephants, so if modern cats attacked a mammoth, it certainly wouldn't work. It is thought that saber tooth tigers didn't bite the throat, but rather brought the prey to the ground and got the jugular from there. Clearly saber tooth tigers could not bring a wooly mammoth to the ground to do that. So the answer: humans. If saber tooth tigers attack a mammoth, the mammoth could probably fight them off.
No.
The wooly mammoth was a species of prehistoric elephants. The impact of the meteor left a mammoth crater on the lunar surface. He travels to Mammoth Cave every year.
While in theory possible, due to the large amount of well preserved mammoth remains in the arctic tundra that has lead to a wealth of genetic information, there are still many roadblocks. Mammoth genetics has reached the point where one can in fact download a mammoth genome from researchers, and researchers have inserted mammoth genes into elephant cells in a lab, but one of the primary problems is the elephant (and presumed mammoth) reproductive system. The elephant reproductive system is complicated enough that in vitro elephants are problematic leading to conservation concerns, in vitro mammoths or elephant-mammoth hybrids could be impossible.
It is impossible to kill a mammoth today, as all of them are already dead. However, when humans hunted mammoths, they did so with stone-tipped spears that were thrown using an atlatl. It would have taken many such spears and many hunters to bring down a mammoth.
As of now, humans are unable to bring someone back to life once they have passed away. While there are advances in medical technology that can prolong life or revive individuals in certain situations, resuscitation or revival after death is not currently possible.
no, they did not.
Humans need to bring food, water, oxygen,
it is possible to bring them back because you are missing just 1 wrong item you may just waste the ingredient and your blood
No, there are no living mammoths today. The last known population of woolly mammoths went extinct around 4,000 years ago, primarily due to climate change and human hunting. However, scientists are exploring de-extinction techniques, including genetic engineering, to potentially bring back traits of mammoths using closely related species like elephants.
No, it is not possible.
Love.