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  2. List of big-game hunters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_big-game_hunters

    Anderson commenced big-game hunting in 1909 and elephant hunting in 1912, after meeting lifelong friend Jim Sutherland. Over the course of his life Anderson shot between 350 and 400 elephants, his favourite calibres for elephant hunting being the .577 Nitro Express, the .470 Nitro Express and the .318 Westley Richards.

  3. Category:Elephant hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Elephant_hunting

    Articles relating to elephant hunting, The poaching of elephants for their ivory, meat and hides has been one of the major threats to their existence. Historically, numerous cultures made ornaments and other works of art from elephant ivory, and its use was comparable to that of gold.

  4. Elephant Managers Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant_Managers_Association

    The Elephant Managers Association (EMA) is an international non-profit organization, for elephant professionals and interested people. EMA, having the largest collection of elephant experts and enthusiasts in the world, promotes welfare, husbandry, and scientific research of captive elephants, through its publication "grey matters", communication and relations among elephant managers through ...

  5. W. D. M. Bell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._D._M._Bell

    He is noted for using smaller calibre bullets [17] [18] rather than the heavy recoiling, larger calibre bullets that were popular with other big game hunters. [19] Like many other professional elephant hunters of the time, he started hunting elephants with a sporting .303 Lee Enfield rifle, taking 63 elephant heads on his first safari.

  6. Hunting in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting_in_the_United_States

    North American hunting pre-dates the United States by thousands of years and was an important part of many pre-Columbian Native American cultures. Native Americans retain some hunting rights and are exempt from some laws as part of Indian treaties and otherwise under federal law [1] —examples include eagle feather laws and exemptions in the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

  7. Big-game hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big-game_hunting

    The Clovis points (North America) and Fishtail projectile points (South America) that developed shortly after the initial colonisation of the Americas around 13,000 years ago are thought to have been primarily used for big game hunting, which may have been a contributing factor in the extinction of most large mammals on these continents. [8]

  8. Smithsonian–Roosevelt African expedition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithsonian–Roosevelt...

    The group was led by the hunter-tracker R. J. Cunninghame. [3] [4] Participants on the expedition included Australian sharpshooter Leslie Tarlton; three American naturalists, Edgar Alexander Mearns, a retired U.S. Army surgeon; Stanford University taxidermist Edmund Heller, and mammalologist John Alden Loring; and Roosevelt's 19-year-old son Kermit, on a leave of absence from Harvard. [5]

  9. Peter Hathaway Capstick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Hathaway_Capstick

    Peter Hathaway Capstick (1940–1996) was an American hunter and author. He was born in New Jersey and educated at the University of Virginia although he was not a graduate. . Capstick walked away from a successful Wall Street career shortly before his thirtieth birthday to become a professional hunt