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- Pair of Antlers, Red Deer, Skull Mount, Scotland 1977
Pair of Antlers, Red Deer, Skull Mount, Scotland 1977
Pair of Antlers, Red Deer, Skull Mount, Scotland 1977
27797
Red Deer Antlers, Bowside lodge, Saobhaidh Burn.
A pair of 10 point red deer antlers with skull cap, mounted onto a wooden plaque. The shield is made from oak with profile edges. These stag antlers are an excellent wall display. Written on the skull cap '13th Oct. 1977, Bowside lodge, Saobhaidh Burn'.
The Red Deer (Cervus elaphus), or Red Stag, is one of the largest deer species that inhabits most of Europe, the Caucasus Mountains region, Asia Minor, Iran, parts of western Asia, and central Asia. It also inhabits the Atlas Mountains region between Morocco and Tunisia in north-western Africa. The red deer is the largest non-domesticated mammal still existing in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and Ireland. The Barbary stag (which resembles the western European red deer) is the only member of the deer family represented in Africa. Only the stags have antlers, which are made of bone and grow at a rate of 2 ½ cm (1inch) a day. The antlers start growing in the spring and are shed each year, usually at the end of winter.
Dimensions:
1950-1999
1977
Antler
Scotland
13th Oct. 1977, Bowside lodge, Saobhaidh Burn
Very good
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