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African Elephants

African elephants are the largest land animals on Earth. They are slightly larger than their Asian cousins and can be identified by their larger ears that look somewhat like the continent of Africa. (Asian elephants have smaller, rounded ears.)

Woolly Mammoth

The woolly mammoth was an enormous mammal that once roamed the vast frozen, northern landscapes in large size. Believed to be closely related to the modern-day elephant, the woolly mammoth remained in the wild until roughly 1700 BC when it became extinct.
The woolly mammoth was found roaming the bitter Arctic tundra where they would often gather in large herds for both warmth and protection. Woolly mammoths lived in two groups which are thought to have been different enough to be characterized as separate subspecies. One woolly mammoth group stayed in the middle of the high Arctic, while the other woolly mammoth group had a much wider range.
The woolly mammoth was an enormous ani

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Kakapo

Giraffe

Crane

Woolly Mammoth

Barn Owl

Electric Eel

African Clawed Frog

Guanacos

African Bush Elephant

Falcon

Yak

Bull Shark

Capybara

Giant Ibis

Mayfly

Echidna

Barb

Scarlet Macaws

Cheetahs

Warthog

Avocet

Magellanic Penguins

Abyssinian

Butterfly Fish

Dusky Dolphin

Eastern Gorilla

Black Widow Spider

African Penguin

Desert Tortoise

Field Spaniel

Asian Elephants

Uguisu

Arctic Fox

African Elephants

Beetle

Tigers

The tiger is the largest feline in the world, with the tiger growing to around 2.5 metres in length. The tiger is the most powerful of all the big cats, and is native to east and southern Asia. The tiger is feared by most human beings who inhabit settlements within the tiger's territory.
There are six different subspecies of tiger which are the Bengal tiger, tiger, the Indochinese tiger, tiger, the Malayan tiger, tiger, the Sumatran tiger, tiger, the Siberian tiger and the South China Tiger. The white tiger tiger is actually a Bengal tiger tiger and is therefore not a subspecies itself.
The average tiger weighs around 300kg and a tiger can stretch its body (and tail) to roughly 4