Woolly Mammoth

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Woolly Mammoth

Mammuthus Primigenius

Last updated: June 30, 2022
Verified by: IMP
Image Credit Mauricio Anton / Creative Commons

Some people want to bring the woolly mammoth back using preserved genetic evidence!

Woolly Mammoth Scientific Classification

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Mammalia
Order
Proboscidea
Family
Elephantidae
Genus
Mammuthus
Scientific Name
Mammuthus Primigenius

Read our Complete Guide to Classification of Animals.

Woolly Mammoth Conservation Status

Woolly Mammoth Locations

Woolly Mammoth Locations


Woolly Mammoth Facts

Main Prey
Grasses, Twigs, Rushes
Fun Fact
Some people want to bring the woolly mammoth back using preserved genetic evidence!
Biggest Threat
Wolves, cave hyenas, large predatory cats, environment change, and climate change
Most Distinctive Feature
Long, thick hair
Distinctive Feature
Enormous tusks
Habitat
Arctic Tundra
Diet
Herbivore
Average Litter Size
1
Lifestyle
  • Herd
Favorite Food
Grasses
Type
Mammal
Slogan
Tusks grew to 16ft long!

Woolly Mammoth Physical Characteristics

Color
  • Brown
  • Black
  • Tan
Skin Type
Hair
Lifespan
60 – 80 years
Weight
12,000
Height
Up to 9.5 feet at the shoulder
Length
12,000
Age of Sexual Maturity
Up to 9.5 feet at the shoulder

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View all of the Woolly Mammoth images!



The woolly mammoth was a furry elephant-like mammal.

It’s closest relative that is still alive today is the Asian elephant. Woolly mammoths lived at the same time as humans. Isolated populations on a few islands lived as recently as 4,000 years ago! Woolly mammoths are well known for their long curved tusks, and mammoth ivory is still a hot commodity among humans to this day.

Description and Size

Woolly mammoths were the same size as today’s African elephants. Males stood between nine and 11 feet high at the shoulder and females were slightly smaller—8.5-9.5 feet high at the shoulder. Males could weigh as much as 12,000 pounds, and females weighed 8,000 pounds. A newborn woolly mammoth would have weighed 200 pounds.

Woolly mammoths were covered in fur, likely to keep them warm in the wintery environments they inhabited. Genetic tests revealed that woolly mammoths ranged in color from blonde to dark brown or black. However, they aren’t sure if there was an evolutionary advantage to this coloring. Preserved woolly mammoth hair is often orangish when it is found, but researchers believe that is due to ground conditions changing the pigmentation. What is most interesting is that the gene researchers used to determine the animals’ coloring is still present in animals today – including humans. This gene causes people to have red hair, and in some other animals, it causes yellow or blonde hair.

Woolly mammoths had long trunks, like elephants, and huge, curved tusks. Researchers believe they used their tusks in a similar manner to modern elephants. They could use their tusks for fighting and use their trunks for handling items and help with foraging.

The main difference between woolly mammoths and modern elephants is their ears. They had much smaller ears, likely to minimize the chance of frostbite. Besides their tusks, they had four large molars to grind their food. Their molars would get replaced six times throughout their lifetime.



2 woolly mammoths fighting in a snowy landscape
Like today’s elephants, woolly mammoths were herbivores.

Dotted Yeti/Shutterstock.com

What Did Woolly Mammoths Eat?

Woolly mammoths likely lived on a diet of mainly grasses and sedges—grass-like plants with flowers. However, evidence found preserved in the stomachs of mammoths shows that they also snacked on flowers, shrubs, materials found on trees, and moss. Different samples show that what the mammoths ate specifically depended on their location.

Some evidence shows that baby mammoths may have eaten excrement to promote the growth of a gut biome that would help them to digest plants as they grew and stopped drinking their mother’s milk.

Since they were so large, they needed to eat a lot of food. Experts believe they had to eat nearly 400 pounds of food each day and could have spent up to 20 hours a day searching for food.

When and Where Woolly Mammoths Lived

Woolly mammoths lived in a type of environment called “mammoth steppe” or “tundra steppe.” This area was found in the northern regions of what we now call Asia, Europe, and North America. There are actually two groups of woolly mammoths that experts are researching to find out if they should be two different subspecies. The first group went extinct about 45,000 years ago and stayed closer to the arctic. The second group went extinct about 12,000 years ago and skeletons of this type have been found as far south as the Shandong Province in China and Granada in Spain.

Woolly mammoths may have gotten onto North America by crossing the land bridge on what is now the Bering Strait over 300,000 years ago.

Researchers consider the woolly mammoth to be one of the most successful mammals of its era because it was present in so many places. They estimate its habitat covered over 33,301,000 square kilometers.

Other mammoth species were present millions of years ago. Woolly mammoths started to diverge from other mammoth species about 800,000 years ago. They went extinct in most places around 10,000 years ago, except for isolated populations on islands that went extinct 4,000 years ago.

Woolly Mammoth Threats and Predators

As such large animals, woolly mammoths may not have had many predators. However, young mammoths and weak or sick animals would have been vulnerable to wolves, cave hyenas, and large predatory cats of the era. There is some evidence that woolly mammoths may have been hunted by humans, but it’s not clear how prevalent that was. There were other, smaller, and easier to hunt animals available to humans at the time. What is more common to see in mammoth skeletons is that humans scavenged the remains after a predator had already killed it or it had died of natural causes.

Threats to woolly mammoths were also environmental. They were sensitive to the long winters when it was harder to find food. This is evidenced by their tusk growth rings, which slowed in the winter. One study of mammoth remains in North America found that the most common time for them to die was in the winter or spring when food was hardest to come by.

Climate change was also likely a threat to woolly mammoths. The final downturn of the woolly mammoth’s population occurred towards the end of the last ice age. However, experts believe that woolly mammoths’ decline could also have contributed to the warming of the environment. They were no longer eating trees, specifically birch trees, that have a sunlight absorbing and warming effect. So, birch forests grew more readily and could have warmed the environment by 0.2 degrees celsius. That doesn’t sound like much, but it did make an effect!

Discoveries and Fossils

Mammoth skeletons are very plentiful. A simple search reveals numerous articles about hundreds of mammoth skeletons being found in one location or another. In 2020, nearly 200 skeletons were found at a construction site in Mexico City. Samples are plentiful, however, there are some notable ones that have helped scientists to learn a lot about woolly mammoths.

There are two types of woolly mammoth remains that can be found. Skeletons or fossils, and actual remains. Many woolly mammoth remains are found frozen. However, one mammoth was found in Poland with preserved soft tissue. It had been naturally mummified in a petroleum seep.

Early frozen mammoth remains from the 1700s were cut up and sold off to the highest bidder. In the 1800s, some were even fed to dogs! Fortunately, since then, scientists have found many well-preserved frozen specimens to study.

Some of the most informative frozen mammoths are mammoth calves. These specimens give us an idea of how mammoths grew and how they cared for their young. For example, by studying these specimens, scientists believe that calves were nursed for 2-3 years before transitioning to a diet of plants.

One frozen mammoth that was found in 2013 still had liquid blood in its abdomen, leading researchers to believe that their blood may have had some anti-freezing capabilities.

Extinction: When and Why Did The Woolly Mammoth Die Out?

There are a few different theories as to why the woolly mammoth died out. The one thing everyone is sure about is when they died out. Most died out about 10,000 years ago. However, a few isolated populations remained on the islands. They lived on Saint Paul Island, which is part of Alaska, until 5,600 years ago. They lived on Wrangel Island, in Russia, until about 4,000 years ago.

It is a bit easier to determine the cause of extinction for the smaller island-based populations. The mammoths on St. Paul Island went extinct because their habitat shrank due to sea-level rise, and that likely reduced the amount of freshwater available.

The Wrangel Island mammoths seem to have been killed by a catastrophic event, which could have been the arrival of humans on the island or changes in the climate. Their disappearance did happen around the same time that humans first came to the island. That pattern is seen in some other mammoth populations. For example, in what is now Alaska and Yukon, mammoths died out 1,000 years after humans appeared.

Experts believe that a shrinking habitat due to a changing climate put the population in a declining trend. Then, human activity and hunting likely sealed their fate.

Mammoth Ivory

Ivory from woolly mammoths is a hot commodity to this day. This is in part because it is illegal in many places to trade or sell elephant ivory, so people use mammoth ivory instead. Climate change and human activity are revealing more and more mammoth skeletons and tusks, especially in Siberia. A lucrative market has formed, particularly exporting mammoth ivory to China, where expert craftspeople carve it into beautiful and traditional designs and figures.

Early humans and Neanderthals used mammoth ivory to make tools and even used mammoth bones as a building material. They also used mammoth ivory to make spear tips.

Bringing Back the Woolly Mammoth

Some people want to bring back the woolly mammoth using preserved genetic evidence. This process is complicated. First, the genome of the extinct animal must be sequenced. Then, scientists must edit the DNA of a close living relative, meaning one must exist. Luckily, in the case of mammoths, the Asian elephant is a good candidate.

The people who want to recreate woolly mammoths believe their return to our ecosystem could help our modern problem of climate change. These experts believe that re-introducing grazers such as woolly mammoths to the current tundra could turn it back into grassland, which may help preserve the permafrost there. They also believe it could help us to learn more about preserving endangered species that already exist today.

Similar to the Woolly Mammoth

Similar animals to the woolly mammoth include:

  • Mastodons – Smaller than the woolly mammoth, they emerged about 25 million years and may have been the mammoth’s predecessors.
  • Gomphotheres – Giant four-tusked animals that looked similar to a modern elephant.
  • Asian Elephant – This is the mammoth’s closest living relative and has several different subspecies living in Asia today.
  • African Bush Elephant – A modern elephant species living in Central and Southern Africa.
  • African Forest Elephant – A subspecies of the African bush elephant, these elephants live in forests and grasslands in central Africa.

View all 74 animals that start with W


About the Author

I’m a freelance writer who has been working in the field of content creation and digital marketing for more than seven years. My favorite topics to write about include health, animals, fitness, and nutrition, though as a professional content provider and ghostwriter, I can easily write about pretty much anything! I love all animals and have been some form of vegetarian or vegan for over 10 years. My favorite animals are cats, dogs, and chickens, especially my own cat, Tula.

Woolly Mammoth FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) 

When did woolly mammoths live?

Woolly mammoths lived from between 800,000 years ago to 4,000 years ago.

How big was the woolly mammoth?

Woolly mammoths stood nine to 11 feet high and weighed as much as 12,000 pounds.

Why did the woolly mammoth go extinct?

Experts believe their extinction was caused by a combination of the end of the last ice age and human activity, namely hunting.

Were woolly mammoths dinosaurs?

No, woolly mammoths were mammals.

Were woolly mammoths elephants?

Yes, woolly mammoths are an extinct type of elephant. They are in the same scientific family classification as elephants that are alive today.

Were there other types of mammoths besides woolly mammoths?

Yes, there were several other types of mammoth species with the most well- known being the pygmy mammoth, the dwarf mammoth, the Columbian mammoth, the steppe mammoth, and the African mammoth.

When were the last woolly mammoths around?

One of the incredible facts about woolly mammoths are that they were still around when King Tut ruled the Egyptians- about 3,600 years ago.

Sources
  1. BBC News, Available here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5154892.stm
  2. Ted Blog, Available here: https://blog.ted.com/10-fascinating-facts-about-woolly-mammoths/
  3. Science Daily, Available here: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/10/151015114748.htm
  4. Science Direct, Available here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982217312642
  5. Everything Dinosaur, Available here: https://blog.everythingdinosaur.co.uk/blog/_archives/2012/04/06/woolly-mammoth-colour-variations.html
  6. Live Science, Available here: https://www.livescience.com/56678-woolly-mammoth-facts.html
  7. BBC, Available here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/1XkbKQwt49MpxWpsJ2zpfQk/13-mammoth-facts-about-mammoths
  8. Kids National Geographic, Available here: https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/animals/prehistoric/facts/woolly-mammoth
  9. Ice Age, Available here: http://iceage.museum.state.il.us/mammals/woolly-mammoth-0
  10. Scienc Daily, Available here: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/08/150825083839.htm
  11. CBC , Available here: https://www.cbc.ca/kidsnews/post/more-than-200-mammoth-skeletons-discovered-in-mexico-city
  12. Why did the woolly mammoth go extinct?, Available here: https://www.livescience.com/woolly-mammoth-skeleton-poop-siberia.html
  13. Wired (1970) Were woolly mammoths dinosaurs?
  14. Science , Available here: https://www.science.org/content/article/bringing-back-woolly-mammoth-and-other-extinct-creatures-may-be-impossible
  15. Revive Restore, Available here: https://reviverestore.org/projects/woolly-mammoth/

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