Not likely. Mammoths were a food source for early man.
Mammoths lived in a very cold environment, and so they had several layers of fat to help protect them from the cold.
yes, there has been a baby mammoth found in Siberia and also a few report's on what looked like rhinoceroses. Children sometimes do homework on these kind of things so you could go on a child's help homework site and find out more there. in Alaska there is sure to have them as well because it was part of the ice age and very cold.
Well with all mammals, like dogs, people, horses etc. the male has a penis and the female a vagina. Maybe that well help some
It is a source of transportation and people think it is cool. what ever
they had long, thick fur to keep out the cold. Their tusks would help get prey.
so they can help people with there fishing
NO , they didn't think about anyone but their selves.
Yeah if a dog isn't doing it properly some people like to help
By feeding them milk and help mend their bones so that they can defend off their enemies, such as the saber-toothed tiger.
Stop dumping rubbish where ever people feel like it
Yes, there was one camp that had P.O.W. from Russia. And with there help more then 100 people escaped the camp.
Some researchers have doubts that mammoths lived in the cold climate zones. Recently, Russian scientists have received strong evidence of woolly mammoths' frost-resistance - they possessed sebaceous glands. The trip to visit mammoths was paid by the International Scientific and Technical Center, and the researchers' search for sebaceous glands was supported by the Federal Target Scientific and Technical Program entitled "Investigations and Developments for Science and Engineering Priority Guidelines in 2002-2006".Specialists of the VECTOR State Research Center for Virology and Biotechnology and the Zoological Institute (Russian Academy of Sciences) have discovered sebaceous glands in the skin of woolly mammoths, the scientific community unsuccessfully looking for sebaceous glands for more than a hundred years. As sebaceous glands are an instrument of adaptation to cold climate, the discovery by Russian scientists serves a convincing argument in the dispute whether the mammoths did live in the frost.