Hell pig is a great suggestion.I'll play,
a colombian mammoth or mastodon would be at the top of my list.
A giant Irish Elk would need to be part of the top three,
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and I would not be able to resist a member of the Entelodontidae, commonly known as the hell pigs. Basically 2000 pound warthogs.
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I'm quite sure I'd go hunt these in their non-exportable versionsUm... how big is your trophy room again?
just a google search.Hell pig is a great suggestion.
Where did you get the other graphic with all the species? It's awesome.
I'm quite sure I'd go hunt these in their non-exportable versions
On the other hand, I think skull mount for the elk, just the tusks of the mammoth and a skull mount of the hell pig, would actually still fit somewhere in the house.
Fortunately a lot of these critters inhabited North America.I seem to remember a wall photo with a Euro deer of some sort? I think you are being optimistic about them fitting.
Holy heck! Didn't even consider the shipping costs! Well, if I won't hunt lion because I can't bring it back, I'd be screwed on species like this.
Terror Bird, from the movie "10.000 BC":
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Depleted uranium from an A10 warthog.And what size of that fancy tungsten shot would you use for those....?...
I was thinking something along the line as appropriate as for Ostrich?And what size of that fancy tungsten shot would you use for those....?...
His new book, Wild New World is good too, I'm in the middle of that right now.For all you interested in the topic, I highly recommend picking up a copy of American Serengeti by Dan Flores
A really well assembled and detailed account of the entire Pleistocene ecosystem across the great plains. Having grown up in that region, the idea of wheat fields and oil pumps (and now wind turbines) being replaced by short grass, short face bears, ground sloths, and unending herds of pronghorn, elk, sheep, etc. is a fantastic mental image.
The thought of these things existing alongside mankind is...terrifying.Terror Bird, from the movie "10.000 BC":
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Thanks, I'll definately be checking this out!For all you interested in the topic, I highly recommend picking up a copy of American Serengeti by Dan Flores
A really well assembled and detailed account of the entire Pleistocene ecosystem across the great plains. Having grown up in that region, the idea of wheat fields and oil pumps (and now wind turbines) being replaced by short grass, short face bears, ground sloths, and unending herds of pronghorn, elk, sheep, etc. is a fantastic mental image.