No one really knows how Mammoths got extinct but Mr. Groom told us a volcano erupted and everything died. :( ME MAD! >:(
The most extreme that we are aware of was the Permian Extinction about 252 million years ago, in which 95% of all life was killed. The cause is still unknown, although it is possible that this was an impact event.
All are indicative of the size and shape and possible habitat of the original organism.
Similarities between living species and extinct species can be used to determine their relationship with one another. Beyond physical characteristics, a comparison of DNA can help establish the relationship between animals.
An object with balanced forces acting on it is still. An object with unbalanced forces acting on them moves at an non constant velocity. It is possible for an object to have balanced forces acting on it and yet move in a vacuum.
(wild guess) 10 It is not possible to give a sensible answer to this question. The greatest common factor (GCF) refers to a factor that is COMMON to two or more numbers. You have only one number in the question!
This is a difficult question to answer because nobody knows for sure why mammoths became extinct. However, one hypothesis is that human activity (particularly over-hunting), was responsible for the extinction of mammoths, and Asian elephants are also threatened with extinction largely due to hunting. Another possible cause of the mammoth's extinction was habitat loss because of climate change. Habitat loss also effects Asian elephants, but for them, it is due to deforestation caused by humans. Note that there is one thing that all extinctions have in common. Extinction occurs when a species is unable to adapt to some change in the conditions of their environment. This may be climate change, habitat loss, the disappearance of their food supply, or even the appearance of a new species that over-hunts them, etc.
The answer to this question is not known. It is possible humans hunted the mammoths into extinction. It is also likely we will never be certain about the answer to this question. We have caused the extinction of numerous other interesting species, such as thylacine.
No one knows for sure why the wooly mammoth became extinct. In about 13,000 BC, humans began developing new bifaced stone tools which enabled them to kill wooly mammoths. Most scientists think those tools caused the extinction of wooly mammoths. Other scientists question that theory because wooly mammoths had been decreasing in numbers in North America for 20,000 years. Probably the decline came because other animals developed and ate the same food. Such an animal could have been the caribou or reindeer. So with the number of wooly mammoths decreasing and humans hunting them, they became extinct. When all the large mammals were destroyed, humans did not become extinct. The new bifaced stone tools made agriculture possible. There are many theories, but a couple are that mammoths could not adapt quickly enough to the changing climate after the ice age, or that they were hunted to extinction by humans.
No it is not possible, once they're extinct they can't come back.
no but its possible they can..
Global whining
Fossils found, such as Wolly Mammoths,differ in many ways. Wolly mammoths are the ancestors to the elephants we have living today. The difference? Wolly mammoths are much longer and differ in size. For example, if you had a mammoth and an elephant stand on their hind legs, the mammoth would be taller.
There are lots of elephants to reproduce already.
what are the possible solutions to prevent jaguars extinction?
it may be possible but that is very slim of happening. The wolverine is on the brink of extinction.
Possible species extinction because of over-poaching.
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.