A mastodon (mastós 'breast' + odoús 'tooth') is any proboscidean belonging to the extinct genus Mammut (family Mammutidae) that inhabited North and Central America during the late Miocene or late Pliocene up to their extinction at the end of the Pleistocene 10,000 to 11,000 years ago.
While scientists aren't exactly sure why this mammal went extinct, it is believed that changing weather conditions during the Late Miocene may have caused a drought. This would have destroyed their feeding grounds and have led directly to their extinction.
TAMING. The platybelodone can be tamed so that its birth is in the 6-block range, if you miss it, you can tame it in two ways. One option is to feed until you tame it, you will also have a mood-boosting effect, the other option is to whip it better until it is tamed, but this will have a mood-reducing effect.
Researchers announced this bizarre beast in a study published today in Science. The creature, given the scientific name Lisowicia bojani, belongs to the dicynodonts, which were some of the first large herbivores. This is the first dicynodont found in Europe.
Platybelodon ("flat-spear tusk") was a genus of large herbivorous mammal related to the Elephants(order Proboscidea). It lived during the Miocene Epoch, about 15-4 million years ago, and ranged over Africa, Europe, Asia, and North America. Although it thrived during its time, it did not survive past the Miocene.
Shovel-tuskers were among the largest proboscideans (related to elephants) to live in North America. Paleontologists once believed they used their huge shovel-shaped jaws and tusks to scoop up aquatic plants, but Museum research suggests multiple purposes, including digging soil and scraping bark off trees.
As members of the family Elephantidae, woolly mammoths were themselves elephants. Their last common ancestor with modern-day elephants lived somewhere in Africa about 6 million years ago. Scientists think woolly mammoths evolved about 700,000 years ago from populations of steppe mammoths living in Siberia.
It's now pretty clear that they lived approximately 8 to 20 million years ago in Africa, Asia and even made their way to North America.
Mastodons were prehistoric relatives of today's elephants. Like their modern cousins, mastodons had tusks, flappy ears and a long nose.
Fifty to 60 million years ago, the prehistoric ancestors of elephants roamed every land mass in the world except Australia and Antarctica. Today, all but two members of the Elephantidae family of the order Probiscidea, meaning animals with trunks, have survived -- African and Asian elephants.
Trilophodon was about 5 m long and 2.5 m high, had four parallel tusks (two on the top jaw, two smaller ones on the bottom jaw) and lived from the Miocene epoch (26 million years ago) to the Pleistocene epoch (2 million years ago) in Europe, Eurasia, Africa, and North America.
About 80 Million years ago, the genetic linage of elephants split from primates. The tree shrew is considered our nearest common ancestor. It is believed that 50-60 million years ago, Moeritheriums, approximately the size of current day pigs, were the roots from which the proboscideans evolved.