I read about them in a book when I was about 5 years old.
Scientists know about them because of bones and frozen carcasses that have been found. The frozen carcasses are from the tundra in Alaska or Russia, and the bones can come from anywhere where woolly mammoths lived in Russia, northern Europe, and Alaska.
From fossils that were most likely found in the La Brea tar pits in California. They hold a lot of giant sloths, saber toothed tigers and wooly mammoths.
they had nothing else to do so they let their kids dig with the claws and that's how they found it. they had no f***ing thing to do.
Fossils and going through their garbage (and sometimes their graves).
no
No it was verified by japanese newspaper yomiuri that a team of scientists headed by Akira Iritani of kyoto had built upon research by Dr. Teruhiko Wakayama of riken in kobe japan had got dna from a mammoth and plan to use it to clone a wolly mammoth. They hope to have a baby one in six years. for more information type in wolly mammoth akira iritani
Mother mammoths fed their babies with milk, just like elephants. After a few months, the baby mammoth started to eat plant material, but it wasn't until the mammoth was two or three years old that it stopped nursing. The baby mammoths stayed close to their moms until they were teenagers. The moms protected them from danger and from other animals. If a mammoth's mom died, one of the other mammoths in the group would adopt the young mammoth. How do we know? Scientists have observed this behavior in elephants, a close relative of the mammoths. They also have looked at the growth rings in tusks of baby mammoths. By looking at the chemicals in each ring, they can tell when the baby mammoth switched from a milk diet to a plant diet.
A scantiest in Japan is working with Russia and the US to clone the DNA of the woolly mammoth from frozen ti-shoe to make a woolly mammoth in about 2-3 years.
well they might. scientists have recently discovered a frozen wooly mammoth and are trying to copy its DNA to create a new mammoth. with our technology today anything is possible.
A Russian hunter.
Scientists had a laugh with this one. The bitsy "woolly mammoth" is actually a tiny hairless rodent with no teeth. They named it on "opposite day".
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.
Waking the Baby Mammoth - 2009 - TV was released on: USA: 26 April 2009 Japan: 7 February 2010
The cast of Waking the Baby Mammoth - 2009 includes: Bernard Buigues as himself Victor Garber as Narrator Vadim Suslov
no one really knows because people have only found one mammoth and it waz a baby
No, nobody has ever cloned an extinct animal from DNA.