Cenozoic era
They lived in Europe and in Sibiria. Some Wooly Mammoths lived in North America and in Eurasia.
In north america and euorpe and south america.
Wooly mammoths have a very strange environment . They live with the mystic snorks deep sea. :)
Woolly mammoths lived in Siberia, Alaska, and northern Europe.
Wooly mammoths are extinct. There are no living wooly mammoths so there are none around to have babies. When they roamed the earth they gave birth to live young.
Most woolly mammoths died out by 8000 BC. The last surviving mammoths were a population of dwarf mammoths on Wrangel Island, and these died out 4,500 years ago, around 2,500 BC.
Woolly mammoths belong to the genus Mammuthus, the same genus as other mammoths. That genus is part of the family Elephantidae, and that is part of the order Proboscidea. Proboscidea is part of the class Mammalia.
Woolly mammoths lived primarily in Russia and northern Europe. However, they have been found in the Arctic regions of North America. These mammoths lived in Alaska.
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.
Wooly Mammoths live in cold, dry habitats, but they migrate year-round. In the winter, mammoths migrate south for warmer environments, and in the summer, they migrate north for colder environments. The "Wooly" in front of their names answers why they do so.
Mammoths are extinct. They don't live anywhere now.
Woolly mammoth primarily lived in Russia and northern Europe. The only US state that they have been found in is Alaska. Woolly mammoths lived on the Alaskan tundra about 10,000 years ago.