i dont no i think it is a fox
the anaconda
I'm not sure about plants, but animals that lived at the same time as the saber toothed cat would be: Terror birds, early humans, woolly mammoths, woolly rhiocerous. ~ ~Sleenky
dinosaurs, saber-toothed tigers, woolly mammoths, and other long-extinct animals
Megalodons were a huge species of shark that lived from the Oligocene epoch through the Pleistocene epoch. Megalodons lived in almost every sea in the world and, like the modern sharks of today, were fish. Woolly mammoths were a large, hairy elephant that lived during the Pleistocene epoch. They lived on the tundra ,among other habitats, and were mammals.
Yes, mammoths lived over vast areas. Woolly mammoths had a range extending from northern Europe across Siberia, through Alaska and Canada, and in the Midwestern USA. Columbian mammoths lived all over North America. There were other species of mammoths that existed prior to that, some of them in Africa.
Early humans depended on the herds of mammoths, bison, and other large animals for food, clothing, shelter, and many other things. So, when the big game moved, humans followed them.
Some of the most notable prehistoric animals that lived in Canada were the Dinosaurs. Other creatures included Sloths and Mammoths.
i dont know, you tell me.
There are no living descendants of woolly mammoths. African elephants are a separate branch, and Asian elephants are a near relative. While there are other mammoth species, these are currently thought to have evolved alongside the woolly mammoth from species such as the steppe mammoth.
No mammoths were vegetarians.
Scientists found that the cave bear was 100 percent carnivorous due to its big, sharp teeth. They suggested that the cave bear probably ate anything like carrion stolen from other predators, and hunted animals like the prehistoric elk.Cave bears eat caribous, woolly rhinoceros, woolly mammoths, woolly bisons, cavemen, and deer.
Mammoths lived in Asia, North America, and Europe. The climates that they lived in varied from temperate, with long, cold winters, to tundra, with mild summers and winters so long and cold that the soil a few inches deep remained frozen year round. The most famous mammoth species, the woolly mammoth, lived in the tundra, hence its other name, the tundra mammoth.
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.