Trachodon and woolly mammoths lived in different time periods. Trachodon, a type of dinosaur, lived during the Late Cretaceous period around 70 million years ago, while woolly mammoths lived during the Pleistocene epoch around 2 million years ago. Their existence did not overlap, so their fossils would not be found together.
Yes, but it is more likely that the cobra's poison would injure the woolly mammoth than killing it.
A "Siberian" mammoth would be a mammoth that lived in the region of Russia known as Siberia. Species of mammoth that lived in Siberia include woolly mammoths and steppe mammoths,
Elephants are mammals, they do not lay eggs. If elephants are descendants of the woolly mammoth, or they share the same genetic ancestor, scientists may consider playing with the DNA in an elephant egg cell to bring out the traits of the woolly mammoth.
Elephants are good swimmers, so there's no reason to think that a wooly mammoth couldn't swim. The water would be very cold, though.
the tanks in the farm were mammoth in size .
There is a large collection of mammoth fossils found on the Isle of Wight in the UK. So, that would suggest that the mammoth was living in northern Europe.
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.
It could if it wounded it by clawed it down and stabbing its fangs into it, but the woolly bison would charge to defend just like a woolly mammoth or a woolly rhino. 3 or a pack of saber-tooth tigers will easily defeat a woolly bison.
Acording to what i have heard it is said that the woolly mammoth would be about twice the size of an African elephant.
Woolly mammoths lived in Siberia and Europe during the last Ice Age, and died out about 10,000 years ago, except for a population of dwarf woolly mammoths that lived on Wrangel Island until only 3,700 years ago.
Adult woolly mammoths were so large that they had few predators. Predators of adult woolly mammoths would have been prehistoric humans and Neanderthals, and possibly Eurasian cave lions and Homotherium (a type of saber-toothed cat). Juveniles and calves would definitely have been hunted by all of the above predators as well as by cave hyenas, which would not have been able to kill an adult mammoth.