But the wild horse
Equus ferus had already died out by the time the first people arrived, and the mammoth was in decline, only surviving for 500 more years.
At the same time, bison were becoming more plentiful and moose and wapiti were appearing in big numbers.
What this and samples of preserved pollen suggest is that a naturally occurring climate shift drove changes in these animals' nutrition.
Animals such as today's elephants, horses and rhinoceroses — and in the past, mammoths, wild horses and rhinos — have a large intestinal pouch that allows them to survive by eating large quantities of low-quality forage.
In colder times, these creatures would have thrived on the region's endless sedge.
But during the Pleistocene-Holocene transition, summers grew warmer and wetter. This thawed swathes of the frozen, featureless northern landscape into lakes, bogs, forests, and tundra where tree willows and meadowland grasses grew.
The new terrain favored wapiti and bison, which became the dominant species and helped nourish the human immigrants.
The conventional wisdom is that, at the turn of the Ice Age, the presence of humans dramatically influenced large mammal species, but it was probably the other way around, argued author Dale Guthrie of the University of Alaska at Fairbanks.
"Humans might have been not so much riding down the demise of the Pleistocene mammoth steppe as they were being carried into (Alaska-Yukon Territory) on a unique tide of resource abundance," he wrote.
Name: Woolly Mammoth (
Mammuthus primigenius)
Primary Classification: Proboscidea (Elephants)
Location: Northern Europe, Siberia and North America.
Habitat: Cold, dry grasslands, open tundra and steppe.
Diet: Low tundra vegetation.
Size: Up to 11.5 ft in length, 10 ft in height and 10,000 lbs in weight.
Description: Dark brown to black in color; long, dense hair and underfur; long, curved tusks; high domed head; humped, sloping back.
Cool Facts: Adults ate up to 400 pounds of vegetation daily. Its tusks could grow to 16 feet. It is among the largest land mammals of the past 2 million years.
Conservation Status: Extinct