Mammoths, caribou and other larger, old animals.
They were skilled at hunting large animals, such as bison, horses, mammoths, etc.
Mammoths, young saber-toothed tigers, and bisons
They were prey, mammoths were herbivores meaning they ate plants. They had no need to hunt for food and were often preyed on by cavemen and other large carnivores (meat eaters.)
Yes , a few species like homotherium,or maybe even smilodon fatalis.Homotherium hunts mammoths with high speed and coordinated effortYoung mastodons (relatives of the mammoth ) are also on the menu
As the world got warmer the woolly mammoth habitat decreased their source of food and as the human population grew the more hunters their was around to hunt the mammoths so that could drove the last of the mammoths to extinction
As the world got warmer the woolly mammoth habitat decreased their source of food and as the human population grew the more hunters their was around to hunt the mammoths so that could drove the last of the mammoths to extinction
Deer, buffalo, mammoths, turtles, fish, small rodents, and birds
The hunted mammoths they ate berries and they wore a piece of cloth
The paleo Indians ate bison,mammoth,and large ground sloths.
No, the Inuit did not hunt woolly mammoths. The Inuit people are primarily associated with Arctic regions of North America and have a history that dates back thousands of years, but woolly mammoths went extinct around 4,000 years ago, long before the Inuit culture developed. The Inuit primarily hunted animals like seals, whales, and caribou that were present in their environment.
they hunted them for their tusks. They also provided lots of meat and had large hides that could be used for clothing