JohnTheGreek
I agree with you, mammoths roamed Wisconsin and elsewhere in the Pleistocene. With all the talk about cloning Mammoths, you have to wonder. They seem to want to re-introduce everything else that lived in Wisconsin so why not Mammoths
A fun thought. I wonder what would you use for mammoth hunting (a 577 Tyrannosaurus?)
quote:
Originally posted by rockhead:
JohnI agree with you, mammoths roamed Wisconsin and elsewhere in the Pleistocene. With all the talk about cloning Mammoths, you have to wonder. They seem to want to re-introduce everything else that lived in Wisconsin so why not Mammoths
A fun thought. I wonder what would you use for mammoth hunting (a 577 Tyrannosaurus?)
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"A cross between a pig and a tank, standing fully 7 feet tall and with a brain the size of a fist, entelodonts are cousins to modern pigs and other hoofed animals. Many of their skulls show evidence of severe wounds that could only have been inflicted by other entelodonts during fights. The bony lumps all over their faces probably evolved to protect delicate areas during an attack."
PRONUNCIATION: EN-TELL-OH-DONT
LIVED: 45 ? 25 million years ago
SIZE: 7 feet at the shoulder
FACT: Omnivorous, eating mostly scavenged carcasses
MEANING: Perfect-toothed
CLOSEST LIVING RELATIVE: Pigs and other hoofed animals
RANGE: Asia and North America
from:
http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/beasts/beasts.html
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Good Hunting & Hunt Safe,
David
[This message has been edited by TXLoader (edited 03-19-2002).]
OOOH I forgot about the Irish Elk. Count me in for one of those tags too!
OK, So an "Ice Age 5" might include . . .
1) Saber Tooth Tiger
2) Wooly Mammoth
3) Wooly Rhinoscerous
4) Irish Elk
5) Wood Bison
Sounds like a bunch of fun eh!
Fred,
Can you imagine what a mammoth hunt might really cost? All the money that would go into building a breeding population? Elephant would be much cheaper I think.
Regards,
JohnTheGreek
Mammoths
Ibex in the Grand Canyon
Imagine your trophy room with a full mount Irish Elk
The .375 would become a minimum for just roaming around in the North American bush.
The day of the 4 Bore would return for mammoths.
JohnTheGreek
Fred,
Can you imagine what a mammoth hunt might really cost? All the money that would go into building a breeding population? Elephant would be much cheaper I think.
Regards,
JohnTheGreek[/B][/QUOTE]
Good Point. I don't suppose you want to run for Wisconsin Gouvernor? With you at the helm we might get the mammoth re-introduction going that much faster.
I believe Northern Wisconsin may be a similar environment to the Pleistocene Steppes that the mammoth lived in and therefore would be a good place for re-introduction.
I'll have to go find a good big bore...
quote:
Originally posted by rockhead:
FredGood Point. I don't suppose you want to run for Wisconsin Gouvernor? With you at the helm we might get the mammoth re-introduction going that much faster.
I believe Northern Wisconsin may be a similar environment to the Pleistocene Steppes that the mammoth lived in and therefore would be a good place for re-introduction.
I'll have to go find a good big bore...
Mammoth and The Irish Elk were gone by about 10k years ago. There was this wierd incident, however, with some South American explorer in the 19th century who alleged that his group shot at, but had no adverse effect upon, a large armadillo like creature that was subsequently believed to be a Giant Ground Sloth. They also found feces and hair in a local cave. This stuff was recently carbon dated at over 10k years old however. WIERD EH?
Fred,
Sounds good! You guys do the genetic research there, keep a few Woolies up there, drop a couple dozen Columbian Mammoths in Southeast Utah and some more Woolies in The Yukon. Lets go hunting!
Regards,
JohnTheGreek
Let's see....a mature male elephant is 30-50 years old, I assume the cows are not of age until the 20 or 30's. then a calf every five or six years????...if we start cloning tommorrow we might have a real nice bull in 2040...huntable population going by the time 2050.
When you live in an area that people find pleistocene fossils commonly(horses seem the most common here) day dreams often turn to BIG and HAIRY game hunting.
I am not saying we shouldn't do it...just saying we need to get started quick!
[This message has been edited by perrydog (edited 03-23-2002).]
Todd E
Red Fox, I'm actually surprised overkill didn't comment, I was expecting someone to suggest a T-rex re-introduction to go with a 577 tyranosaur.