it live for many many years but then it died because they died of the heat
i dont know it is california lol
the dire wolf went extinct because there started to be less and less of them. everyday a dire wolf had got killed by a human, another animal, or from not eating
plI-stO-sEne (Capitals are long vowels)
The Pleistocene Epoch was from about 1.8 million to 11,000 years ago. The word means "nearly present" or "most new" in Greek.It is marked by the ice ages and the emergence of the human species.
Yeah movie called cal dire straits did the songs main one is called " the long road" theme from cal
The largest of the three wombat species is the Common wombat which can grow to 900-1150 mm long and 22-39 kg. During the Pleistocene Era, a wombat growing up to 3 tonnes is believed to have existed.
Walk of Life by Dire Straits
About 30 years.
The mammoth is an extinct mammal that resembled modern elephants in appearance. They lived during the Pleistocene epoch and are closely related to elephants. Mammoths had long curved tusks and were adapted to cold environments.
six days
No, they were first brought by the Conquistadors and later by other Europian colonists. ================ Answer: There were horses throughout the Americas up to the end of the Pleistocene Period. They became extinct at about the same time as woolly mammoths, American camels, dire wolves, sabre-toothed cats, stag-moose and woolly rhinoceros. So yes, there were horses in South America long before the conquistadors - but they were tiny prehistoric horses, about the size of a large dog, and they became extinct long before the Spaniards arrived.
1. Dire wolves existed until 10,000 years ago. 2. Dire wolves lived in North and South America. 3. Dire wolves were 5 ft long and weighed 130 to 190 lbs. 4. They probably hunted in packs, similar to modern wolves. 5. Remains from over 3,600 dire wolves have been recovered from the La Brea Tar Pits. That is more than any other mammal species. 6. The Alsatian Shepalute is a type of dog specifically bred to match the size and bone structure of the Dire wolf. 7. The scientific name of the Dire wolf is Canis dirus. It belongs to the same genus as modern dogs and gray wolves. 8. Canis dirus probably evolved from Canis ambrusteri, another type of extinct dog. 9. The first Canis dirus fossil to be discovered was a jawbone. It was found in Evansville, Indiana during the summer of 1854. 10. Joseph Leidy assigned the scientific name to the Dire wolf.