i dont no i think it is a fox
4,000 years ago New DNA research shows the world got too wet for the giant animals to survive. Summary: Humans did not cause woolly mammoths to go extinct climate change did. For five million years, woolly mammoths roamed the earth until they vanished for good nearly 4,000 years ago and scientists have finally proved why.
Scientists are not sure what caused the extinction of the woolly mammoths, but they have a few theories. Theories include climate change at the end of the Ice Age, human induced diseases, and human overhunting. It could have also been any combination of the above.
pretty much anything you can think of including like food and clothing and many other things
No one is certain why the mammoth became extinct. They died. They may have succumb to climate change at the end of the last Ice Age. Other theories are related to the arrival of modern humans, which may have spread diseases that were fatal to mammoths, or over-hunted them.
this has been a mystery for a long time, scientists think that it is because of hunting and climate change
There are three reasons why mammoths went extinct. Scientists have proven that they are all combined to get the result of mammoths dieng. They are: Humans hunting them down Lack of food -Mammoths were the biggest grass eaters after the ice age the grass land became trees Climate change
i love cookies and mammoths are all gone they all died no one knows how they died they just did ok ok
Elephants are mammals, they do not lay eggs. If elephants are descendants of the woolly mammoth, or they share the same genetic ancestor, scientists may consider playing with the DNA in an elephant egg cell to bring out the traits of the woolly mammoth.
Excluding a population of dwarf woolly mammoths on Wrangel Island (which lasted until 3,700 years ago), woolly mammoths became extinct 10,000 years ago. The species of mammoth native to North America was the Columbian mammoth. One skeleton of a Columbian mammoth has been dated to being less than 8,000 years old.
The Woolly mammoth used its incisors (tusks) to dig in the snow and pick up plants and tree parts to eat.
Woolly mammoths had two types of hair: a coarse outer layer called guard hair that provided protection from the elements, and a soft undercoat that helped to insulate them from the cold. The outer guard hair was long and shaggy, often reaching lengths of up to 3 feet.