Bull Elk (male elk) weigh around 700 lbs. and are 5 feet tall from the toe to the shoulder Cow Elk (female elk) weigh around 500 lbs. and are 4 1/2 feet tall from the toe to the shoulder Newborn Calves weigh about 35 lbs. at birth
They are similar. The Irish deer still lives wild in Ireland while the Irish Elk was a much larger form of deer and is long extinct! None as The Great Irish Elk.
Megaloceros giganteus is the scientific name for Irish elk Source:en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_Elk
No. The Irish Elk (which is extinct, by the way), were herbivores, just like today's deer and deer-related species are. The Irish Elk were prey animals, hunted down by lions, wolves and sometimes bears.
Irish elk were likely preyed on by the same animals that prey on most deer and elk today: wolves, bears, cougars, lions, tigers, etc.
The most recent remains of the Irish Elk have been carbon dated to about 7,700 years ago in Siberia.
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The antlers of the Irish elk were absolutely amazingly huge, much wider spanning and longer than any species of deer or member of the deer family existing today. On average, a bull Irish elk's antlers were found to have a span that was at least 10 to 12 feet in length, or the span of two men laying end-to-end to each other.
Irish Elks lived in grassland bordering on woods and forests. The Irish Elk ate a mixture of seasonal grasses, herbs and leaves. In the winter Irish Elk may have had to "make do" or survive on tree twigs and bark.
The Irish Elk has been extinct for about 7,700 years, so it is difficult to know how many could be given birth to by one mother.
the Irish elk or the grey wolf
Irish elk became extinct in the Late Pleistocene. Some say it was because of a later growing season and some blame prehistoric man for their demise.