Mammoths, bears, elephants
+++
Really? There no mammoths left though I dare say elephants might shelter in rock-shelters if any exist where they live. Bears might use caves (again, if available locally to them) as dens or forhibernation.
The predominent cave-dwelling mammal is the bat - using caves as roosts, nurseries and hibernaculae but emerging at dusk to feed outside. There are no known fully cave-dwelling mammals.
Animals which live in caves for all or much of their lives include blind fish, a type of arachnid called a harvestman, and crickets. Animals which live in caves seasonally or temporarily, or which shelter in caves include bats, snakes, lizards, bears, mice, rats, and humans.
They live under rocks and live inside caves. Their habitats of where they live in is on tropical forest and deserts located in Africa , South Asia and India
Because they adapted to live in caves, preying on other small invertebrates also adapted to live in there.
No
Neither. They may live in or around woodland, but not up trees, and certainly not in caves.
Well, it all depends if you mean that a mammal's home is primarily caves because bears hibernate in caves. so no.
caves
They lived mostly in caves.
During the Ice Age, people lived in structures made of animal bones, tusks, and hides. These structures were often dome-shaped and designed to withstand cold temperatures. They were movable dwellings, allowing these early humans to follow herds of animals for hunting and gathering.
bannas
caves or tents
no where they lived in caves
neither! lions are ground mammals and if there's a storm they usually find caves to get shelter in.
longhouses, huts, teepees, wigwams, and caves.
Bats are the only mammals that have wings and can fly. They mostly thrive in dark caves around the world.
Animals which live in caves for all or much of their lives include blind fish, a type of arachnid called a harvestman, and crickets. Animals which live in caves seasonally or temporarily, or which shelter in caves include bats, snakes, lizards, bears, mice, rats, and humans.
Kangaroos do not live in caves. In bad weather, they may shelter under cliff overhangs or perhaps the entrances of caves, but they do not live in caves.