The entire organisms are preserved.
yes some insects dead when frozen because they become very weak so they are not strong enough to fly.
Currently, a mouse that has been frozen and thawed cannot be brought back to life. While some organisms, like certain frogs and insects, can survive freezing by entering a state of suspended animation, mammals do not possess the same capabilities. Freezing causes ice crystals to form in their cells, leading to irreversible damage. Research in cryopreservation is ongoing, but as of now, reviving a frozen mammal remains unachievable.
Chicken that is frozen.
No. A mammoth trapped in ice is a body fossil. Trace fossils are evidence of life but not part of the animal itself. Examples of trace fossils are footprints, nests, worm burrows, teeth marks etc. Coprolites (fossilized Dung) in the strictest sense are also trace fossils. Eggs, teeth, bones, skin, hair, feathers etc are all body fossils.
No they can't eat frozen foods!!
The evidenCe that there was mammoths is that years ago many were found frozen and they are an ancestor of elephants
Frozen Mammoths.
Thayer had long and thick fur and found in frozen areas so I would say their habitat is cold frozen or wet areas.
All the wooly mammoths were frozen to death. They got frozen in a big ice burg and are still preserved at sea somewhere. but nobody has found them yet so they are lonley at sea and they need a friend:( if you were a wooly mammoth trapped in an ice cube you would be cold to.
Not usually frozen ground, but ice itself. Ice preserves carcasses better because the air capsules in the ice balance the oxygen levels. Ice and frozen ground in ancient siberia stays frozen ground. And it works as a near perfect preserve.
Food & water were unavailable & frozen. It also made People more desperate for Food.
If you are religious then yes. The Bible says God created everything in 6 days. So, I'm pretty sure dinosaurs or mammoths didn't die in 6 days. :) But if you look at fact, No, They lived millions of years apart from each other, and we know this from carbon dating fossils and the frozen remains of mammoths.
big foot
Not so far. Here's the problem: we find frozen mammoths because mammoths lived during the last Ice Age, which just (geologically speaking) ended. Dinosaurs lived much, much longer ago and since then there have been many warm periods when all the ice melted, even in Anarctica. If any dinosaurs had been frozen, they would have been thawed out long ago.
Not everything was frozen, there was still some visible foliage, they could also tell when there was grass and plants under thin layers of snow or ice, they would just dig to it
Yes. The last mammoths died off about 4000 years ago. Several specimens have been found almost intact, frozen in the permafrost of the Siberian tundra, having died there between 10,000 and 200,000 years ago.
tundra