var arrayFacts=[

"<b>Old Friends.</b><br><br>Although the Woolly Mammoth is an old, and extinct, species it actually shared the planet with humans. The last Woolly Mammoth died about 1700 BC. <br><br>While most others died out 12,000 years ago, a small population of the dwarf variety were able to survive on Wrangel Island in the Arctic Ocean well into the human era.",

"<b>Welcome to Jurassic Park!</b><br><br>Scientists are trying to create a real life Jurassic Park using DNA from Woolly Mammoth fossils. <br><br>A team of scientists in Japan are trying to retreive the sperm from a Woolly Mammoth found in the frozen tundra of Siberia and inject it into a modern day elephant. The offspring would then be raised and studied in a wildlife preserve. <br><br>The project is a long way off and many scientists think it not only dangerous, but morally irresponsible as well.",

"<b>The World Over!</b><br><br>Woolly Mammoths evolved in Africa about 4 million years ago and spread throughout Asia and Europe.<br><br> Most of the species died out about 10,000 years ago but they were immortalized in cave drawings found in France and Spain. They were about 9 to 14 ft and weighed some 7 tons.",

"<b>Handy Tools!</b><br><br>The most distinct characteristic of Woolly Mammoths were their massive tusks. These reached about 10 feet, and were really incisor teeth. <br><br>They were used for various reasons -  mating rituals, protection, and digging for food in the snow.",

"<b>Hidden in Snow.</b><br><br>There have been a number of Woolly Mammoth carcasses found across Asia and Europe. <br><br>In 1997, a family discovered a piece of tusk from a 20,000 year old specimen protruding from the snow. And in 1977, a well preserved carcass of a baby mammoth was found, which was called Dima. <br><br>Scientist believe that there a hundreds, and perhaps thousands, of carcasses to be found in Siberia, where the icy temperatures would have preserved the massive animals."];
