Irish elk
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Irish elk (Megaloceros giganteus), also called the giant deer or Irish deer, is an extinct species of deer in the genus Megaloceros. It is one of the largest deer that ever lived. Its range extended across northern Eurasia during the Pleistocene, from Ireland to Lake Baikal in Siberia.
The most recent remains of the Irish elk have been found to be about 7,700 years old in western Russia. What makes this deer truly amazing is its huge antlers, which can span over 4.2 metres (13.8 feet) across—the largest known of any deer. Even though it is called an elk, scientists agree that its closest living relatives are fallow deer (Dama), not the animals we call elk today.
Taxonomy
Research history
The first scientist to describe the Irish elk was Irish doctor Thomas Molyneux in 1695. He saw big antlers dug up in Ireland and thought they came from elk, which are also called moose in North America. In 1799, another scientist named Johann Friedrich Blumenbach gave it the scientific name Alce gigantea. He described it as a huge fossil elk from Ireland.
Later, in 1812, French scientist Georges Cuvier said the Irish elk was not related to any living animal. In 1827, Joshua Brookes created a new group name for it called Megaloceros, meaning “great horn” in Greek. Over time, the name Megaloceros giganteus became the accepted scientific name for this giant deer.
Evolution
The Irish elk belonged to the genus Megaloceros. Scientists are still unsure where this species first appeared, but it likely was not in Western Europe. The oldest known fossils of this species are from places like England and Germany, dating back hundreds of thousands of years.
Many Irish elk fossils have been found in Ireland, especially from around 13,000 years ago. Scientists have studied their DNA and found that they were closely related to both red deer and another species called fallow deer. This helps us understand how they evolved and where they fit among other deer species.
Description
The Irish elk was a very large deer that stood about 2 meters (6 feet 7 inches) tall. It had huge flat antlers, the largest of any known deer. Some antlers reached 4.26 meters (14 feet) from tip to tip. The Irish elk was also very heavy, weighing between 450 and 600 kilograms. Male Irish elk were larger than females. The Irish elk had a special shape to its skull and bones. Based on old cave paintings, it likely had light-colored fur with dark stripes and a dark hump on its back.
Habitat
The Irish elk lived across a wide area, from the Atlantic Ocean to Lake Baikal. They liked places with scattered spruce and pine trees, along with low plants like grasses, sedges, Ephedra, Artemisia, and Chenopodiaceae. In warmer times, they could also live in forested areas of Europe. Their antlers were smaller to help them move through the trees.
Palaeobiology
Physiology
A Canadian scientist thought the Irish elk was good at running and could go long distances. It looked a lot like reindeer. It had short legs, long front legs almost as long as its back legs, and a strong body. Animals like saiga antelope, gnus, and reindeer can run fast and keep running for a while.
Reproduction
Scientists found over 100 Irish elk in one place, and they were all small males. This suggests that male and female Irish elk stayed apart during certain seasons. Many deer do this because males and females need different foods. The males might have fought for groups of females during mating time. Most of the Irish elk found were young or old and might have died because of very cold winters. Male Irish elk often die more because they don’t eat much during mating season.
The Irish elk had huge antlers, which they probably used to fight other males and show off to females. Scientists think the antlers grew back every year for mating season. Making such big antlers needed a lot of calcium and phosphate, which the males got from their bones and food.
Diet and life history
The teeth of the Irish elk show that they ate both leaves and grass. Scientists found pollen from different plants stuck in their teeth, showing they ate many types of food. Their diet changed with the seasons, and they could eat anything from leaves to grass.
Their bones show they grew fast and lived up to at least 19 years. A big male Irish elk would need to eat a lot every day, especially when growing its huge antlers. They might have eaten plants near lakes and forests to get enough nutrients. Evidence shows that cave hyenas sometimes ate or scavenged Irish elk.
Relationship with early humans
Ancient paintings of the Irish elk can be seen in caves like Chauvet Cave in France. Scientists have found bones of Irish elk with marks that show they were hunted by early people called Neanderthals. These bones come from places like Bolomor Cave in Spain and northern Italy.
Some Irish elk bones also show marks from tools. For example, a bone from Ofatinţi in Moldova has special cuts on it. Artists from long ago also drew Irish elk, though not as often as other animals like deer. These drawings help us learn about how people lived with these giant animals.
Extinction
The Irish elk was a very large deer that lived when the Earth had many glaciers. Changes in the climate made it hard for them to find food and space to live. The forests grew thicker, which may have made it difficult for the deer to move around and find enough to eat.
Humans also hunted these deer, and this may have added pressure on their populations. Over many years, these changes together likely led to the Irish elk disappearing from the world. The last known remains of these deer were found in Russia, dating back about 7,700 years ago.
Modern significance
Many bones of the Irish elk were found in Ireland. In the 1800s, people sold these bones to museums and collectors. Some bones were used as decorations in homes.
The Irish elk appears on the coat of arms of Northern Ireland. It was also on the cover of a 2022 album by the Irish band Fontaines D.C. called Skinty Fia.
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