Mallets are used for the xylophone. I myself own one and you can get mallets most likely at your local music store (or order off the internet.) Do NOT use drumsticks. Those are made for drums. Not a xylophone.
A xylophone and two small mallets. And hands.
they are called keys
Mallet(s)
sticks
Orchestras normally have 1 xylophone or no xylophones at all.
Xylophones usually play in the treble celf* - They have made xylophones for bass clef though.
Poles
There are at least 9 different types of xylophones which includes Amadindas, Akadindas, Embaires, Kulintang a kayo, Balofons, Gandingan a kayo, Luntangs, T'rung and Timbela.
I personally associate singing with childhood, but this answer will probably get edited by many people, because everyone has slightly different childhood experiences. Some of the first songs I ever heard were lullabies that my father sang, and then folk music. We learned more folk songs in school. Many preschool children receive toy percussion instruments, such as tambourines and the little toy "xylophones" (real xylophones are made of wood; the large instruments that look like xylophones but are made of metal are called orchestra bells, so those tiny toys should be called toy orchestra bells, not xylophones). Elementary school kids usually learn to play the flutophone or a plastic recorder. In the US, some of the most common songs that children hear as infants and toddlers include "The Itsy Bitsy Spider" and "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" and "Rock a Bye Baby."
i think all xylophones are the same
Orchestras normally have 1 xylophone or no xylophones at all.
There actually is no State xylophone in Arizona, all xylophones are the same
Metal xylophones use metal or rubber mallets. Wooden xylophones use metal mallets due to there slower vibrations. The metal mallets help increase its vibrations and make it sound as bright crisp as metal xylophones.
marimba
yes
2.
They can be both.
mexico
Making music...
Zealot
Xylophones usually play in the treble celf* - They have made xylophones for bass clef though.