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.
A preserved fossil is an organism or Animal that has been PERFECTLY PRESERVED for lots of years, or however old it may be. For example, a wooly mammoth frozen in the ice for millions of years would be known as a preserved fossil.There are 2 different types of fossil preservation- preservation with alteration and without. With alteration also has different types. The type of organism you are looking for depends on the how it was preserved.
decay
The animal you are referring to is the mammoth. They were large, elephant-like creatures that lived during the Ice Age, but are now extinct. The term "mammoth" has become synonymous with anything that is huge or gigantic.
The joke, 'a frozen cookie' is usually known as dry ice.
In theory, any kind of fossil can be preserved in ice, but among prehistoric animals, the most commonly found preserved in ice are mammoths and mastodons. We know exactly what a woolly mammoth looked like because entire specimens, hair and all, have been found frozen (the details of hair or skin most dinosaurs are depicted with is basically guesswork).
Technically, the term fossil refers to remains that have been replaced with minerals. Therefor, a frozen mammoth is not really a fossil. Instead, it could be called a frozen mummy.
A preserved fossil is an organism or Animal that has been PERFECTLY PRESERVED for lots of years, or however old it may be. For example, a wooly mammoth frozen in the ice for millions of years would be known as a preserved fossil.There are 2 different types of fossil preservation- preservation with alteration and without. With alteration also has different types. The type of organism you are looking for depends on the how it was preserved.
The woolly mammoth.
In solidified tar, or frozen in ice.
mammoth,wolf,polar bear and caribou
Frozen fossil
A mammoth is the most likely animal to be frozen in ice, because it lived during the ice age.
The Huntington mammoth fossil is estimated to be around 13,000 years old. It belongs to the species Mammuthus primigenius, commonly known as the woolly mammoth. This age places it in the late Pleistocene epoch, a period characterized by the last ice ages and the presence of large megafauna.
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.
The mammoth is used to make ice cream and ice for the villagers. They roll the snow with their snout to harvest.
Frozen ice
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.