Sabre tooth tigers, also known as Smilodon, are now extinct. They lived during the Pleistocene epoch, around 2.5 million to 10,000 years ago, and were known for their long, curved canine teeth. Fossil evidence suggests they were widespread across North and South America.
A species that has entirely died out is considered extinct. An example of extinct species are the dodo, saber-tooth tigers, woolly mammoths, Canary Island giant rats, Cape lion, and the Red Rail.
No, unfortunately we are not like sharks, who continue to grow nice new teeth throughout their lives. If a tooth falls out of our mouths, we will have a gap there permanently unless we get a fake tooth. The only time a tooth falls out and gets replaced by a new tooth, is when our baby teeth begin to fall out during childhood.
Not even remotely. The wolverine, a contemporary animal, is a mustelad. The Sabre tooth cat (Smilodon) was a feline, and has been extinct for between ten and fifteen thousand years.
There is a long list of extinct animals. The dinosaur is one example, the dodo bird is another. Some other extinct animals are the Great Auk, the passenger pigeon, the Tasmania tiger, and the saber tooth tiger.
a supposed human ancestor, based on the discovery of a single tooth that was later found to belong to an extinct pig
The sabre tooth is extinct
the were. but they when extinct.
Saber Tooth Tiger
Sabre tooth tiger
Saber Toothed Tigers were endangered but they are extinct now.
No, saber-tooth tigers have been extinct for many thousands of years,.
Jaguars are not extinct.But however the most extinct cats are the saber-tooth tigers,i believe.
-Woolly Mammoth -Sabber Tooth Tigers
an extinct saber tooth tiger
The ancestor of the saber tooth was a marsupial, making it more closely related to kangaroos and opossums than to tigers.
The weight of a human tooth ranges from 0.1 to 0.2 ounces, depending on the size and type of tooth.