Woolly mammoths could have only had one calf at a time. Because of the long gestation period, a female mammoth would probably one have a few calves in her lifetime.
The woolly mammoth was the last species of the genus Mammuthus. Most populations of the woolly mammoth in Eurasia and North America died out at the end of the last Ice Age.There are many explanations about how they died.One is: About 12,000 years ago, wetter, warmer weather began to take hold. The woolly mammoth, in its warm, thick furry coat, could not withstand the rising temperatures.Another is: Due to the climate change different plants started to grow in the countries in which the Woolly Mammoth lived. There became more of these plants and less grass and other vegetation the Mammoth ate. When the Mammoth's food source had gone they ventured further north in order to find some more food. Eventually there was no food left anywhere and the Mammoth died out. This theory's evidence is that by examining the pollen that came from around that time you can see that there are very little amounts of grass pollen (which is what mammoth's ate) and much more other pollen. You can see that the Mammoths moved further north when there became less mammoth fossils in areas the Mammoths used to live and more further North.
There are many present day animals that are relatives of the woolly mammoth. The Elephant is the most recognizable, but, there are in fact others such as the Rat, leopard and Turkey are all relatives as well.
There were many mammoth species, and each one had a different mass. The largest, the Songhua River mammoth, grew up to a mass of about 17,000 kilograms. The woolly mammoth's mass was about 8,000 kilograms.
They became extinct only around ten thousand years ago.
200 - 500 lbs of vegetation per day.
the wooly mammouth is extinct. Actually they died in the ice age. their closest relation is with the elephant.
Where do I start? Colombian, Wooly, Mastodon (a close relative of the mammoth), pygmy, and many others.
Eurasia and North America (Woolly Mammoth that is). Good places are gravel pits and... the bottom of the North Sea! The North Sea was a plain during the last ice age with lots of animals, such as ancient bison, giant elk, reindeer, woolly rhino, horses, lions, hyena and mammoths. Fishing boats catch many fossils in their nets, with more than a thousand mammoth teeth alone each year!
There are many extinct animals but here are some examples: woolly mammoth, Tasmanian Tiger, dodo, cave bear, saber tooth tiger, giant kangaroos
Mammoths lived in many different habitats around the world. However, they usually lived in grasslands. Some, such as the Woolly Mammoth, lived in Arctic grasslands (tundra), and others, such as the Columbian Mammoth, lived in temperate grasslands, and others, such as the African Ancestor Mammoth, lived in savannas. Note that mammoths in warmer climates didn't have long hair.
1. body 2. size 3. how it mates 4. the raction to mice 5. the tuskes 6. how heavy/ wiehgt 7.noise/the way they comunicate 8. how many babies 9.where they are found 10. how fast they are 11. there is alot more than i know...