Mammoths, like modern elephants, likely used their trunks to help clean themselves by swiping away dirt and debris from their skin. They may have also taken dust baths, rolling in mud or dust to protect their skin from parasites and sun exposure. Additionally, social grooming among herd members could have played a role in maintaining hygiene. Overall, their cleaning behaviors would have been similar to those of contemporary large herbivores.
they uses there powerful trunks
Mammoths usually drank water and it had to be clean to.
rats are really clean. they clean themselves you know. ALL THE TIME they clean themselves.
Mammoths were a big-dangerous animal in their land, one that they hunted. The presence of mammoths diminished because of humans. Cavemen drew on cave walls because they were developing awareness, they were seeing themselves in their world (and mammoths were in their world). That was the beginning of the brilliant, awful reign of humans on earth. We became very sentient.
You don't. They clean themselves.
Elephants are less hairy than mammoths and do not posses such large tusks. Elephants are not extinct, while mammoths are.
It's their way to clean themselves and keep themselves clean. It's how groom.
Like cats and most dogs, they will lick themselves clean, or bath in water.they lick themselfs clean or they wash of in the water
Hairless cats clean themselves by licking their skin with their rough tongues, similar to how cats with fur groom themselves. They use their saliva to remove dirt and oils from their skin, keeping themselves clean and healthy.
Jaguars clean themselves by licking their fur, similar to how domestic cats groom themselves. They use their rough tongues to remove dirt, parasites, and excess oils from their coats, helping to keep themselves clean and maintain their camouflage in the wild.
TO clean them like they clean themselves
The mammoths lived for 100,000000 of years but a mammoths lived for 80 years