Extinct species of cervid (deer/elk)
1There issued from the forest to the westward the stately Irish elk.
2The Cervus Americanus found in Kentucky was as large as the Irish elk, which it greatly resembled.
3The Irish elk ignored this creeping revolution.
4Irish Elk, an example of co-adaptation.
5The Irish Elk antlers were withdrawn at €7,000 but are under negotiation.
6Mammoths, mastodons, and Irish elks, now extinct, must have lived down to human, if not almost to historic times.
7The Irish elk roamed the earth 10,000 years ago.
8In an excerpt from his latest book, Michael Viney examines the history and demise of the great Irish elk and deer.
9Dick Ahlstrom reports A 100-year debate over the extinct Irish elk, the largest deer to have lived, has finally been settled.
10The misnamed giant Irish elk was not an elk at all and its nearest living relative is the pint-sized fallow deer.
11They've taken the skeleton of the Great Irish Elk out of the peat, set it up, an astounding crate full of air.
12If there is to be a returning, why not at once put in a claim on the part of the Irish Elk?
13Our prehistoric ancestors hunted the mammoth, the woolly-haired rhinoceros, and Irish elk; the ancient Britons had the wild ox, the deer, and the wolf.
14For decades there has been argument over whether the Irish elk was more closely related to the modern red deer, or the fallow deer.
15A LIFESIZE bronze of the great Irish elk, which became extinct 5,000 years ago, today stands bereft of its maleness.
16The great Irish Elk is calculated by Prof. Owen to have cast off and renewed, annually in its antlers eighty pounds of bone.]
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Translations for irish elk