Mostly because they have well-preserved specimens of Woolly Mammoth, so that is a good place to start.
Currently, I have not heard any news on scientists cloning the Saber-toothed Tiger. As of December 2011, however, news broke that scientists plan to clone the wooly mammoth within five years. If this is a successful cloning, I will bet that scientists will pursue interest in cloning more extinct creatures.
No all the dinosaurs were dead by the time of the mammoth.
yes! Scientists are currently trying to as well. Scientists have been able to reverse stuff in the embryos of birds, which gave those birds features that were the same as dinosaurs. Eventually, we will see some dinosaurs :D
by the process of dating fossils
seeing as they lived in the ice age, the dinosaurs.
No. Mammoths are from the ice age not the Mesozoic era (dinosaur age).
Wolly mammoths came after dinosaurs.
Alaska has no state dinosaurs, but its state fossil is the woolly mammoth.
The "dinosaurs" that could fly, such as Pterodactyl, or swim, such as Elasmosaurus, weren't true dinosaurs. Therefore, they were prehistoric animals that were not dinosaurs.
Pteranodon,Brachiosaurus, Wooly Mammoth,Smilodon(or Sabre toothed cat), tyrannosaurus and other Jurassic and cretaceous dinosaurus were there.
A scantiest in Japan is working with Russia and the US to clone the DNA of the woolly mammoth from frozen ti-shoe to make a woolly mammoth in about 2-3 years.
well they might. scientists have recently discovered a frozen wooly mammoth and are trying to copy its DNA to create a new mammoth. with our technology today anything is possible.