Wow that's a huge animal! Im just wondering; how did they use to hunt bison before the availability of such rifle power? I'm pretty sure bow&arrow use to be the tool of choice a few centuries ago..
So really were talking about shot-drop performance?
Btw excuse this young buck, I've never hunted anything bigger than moose.
Oh yes. "extreme exercise" indeed. As to my native ancestors who hunted them with stone tipped arrows and lances, kudos to them. I doubt very much it was pretty or noble though. And a little earlier, according to some, they managed to kill off all the mammoths. Which boggles my mind. - dan
This is way off topic but google "Clovis Point" to see the wicked ass stone points they used to use on woolly mammoths. A large number of those points have been found with mammoth carcases.
This is all very interesting. I have seen three Bison killed with 7mm magnums. I have killed two and my dad has killed one. 7mm bullets of proper construction don't bounce off buffalo hearts and holes in Buffalo hearts kill them dead.
I have a friend who killed two cape buffalo very dead with 160 grain partitions shot from his 7X57. In the heart.
Many different kinds of animals, when poorly hit, can travel a long long ways.
This is all very interesting. I have seen three Bison killed with 7mm magnums. I have killed two and my dad has killed one. 7mm bullets of proper construction don't bounce off buffalo hearts and holes in Buffalo hearts kill them dead.
I have a friend who killed two cape buffalo very dead with 160 grain partitions shot from his 7X57. In the heart.
Many different kinds of animals, when poorly hit, can travel a long long ways.
I saw it being skinned, problem was cheap cup and cores, in a speedy cartridge like the 7mag. They penetrated less than a foot on the neck shot, potentially as little as 8", and the shot that had a chance to reach the heart punctured the rib cage, but clearly didn't make it home. The choice of bullets regardless what we read on the internet makes a big difference.
Great read, well titled!
I have had the good fortune of having drawn a bison tag for northern Alberta (first year available). Those beasts are real tanks. Their body structure, although bovine in category, is so different from a "beef" animal, they can be deceiving when looking for proper shot placement. "Heart" shots can be misplaced by shooting too low, due to the thickness of the brisket bone (first-hand experience with this one). I was finally able to but my bull down by aiming "dead-center" and actually clipped the underside of the spine, dropping him in his tracks. The spine and "feather bones" (the large bones off of the spine that go into the "hump") are actually a third of the body thickness. I shot my bull with my Merkel 150.1 sxs in 9.3x74r. After he ran away following the first shot, I really questioned weather I had enough gun too!
Being a butcher by trade, I am a little bit anal about body structure, etc, and I was lucky enough that we were able to winch the bull whole, out to the road and then winch the gutted carcass onto a flatbed trailer. Just so you can appreciate the size of these critters, the dressed animal weighed 1050 lbs on my certified scales. That is as much or more than the average elk or moose, live on the hoof! The head weighed 162 lbs, and the whole hide weighed in at 168 lbs. It took three of us to pull the guts out. Fealt like a 500 lb bale of wet hay!
The big bulls are tough! Not just tough to put down, but I mean "chewy" tough! When thinking about first nations, and how they managed to kill bison, just remember that they weren't after horns. They targetted the cows and calves, more for the eating quality,as well as being a bit easier to kill. The hide on my bulls robe, came back shaved, and still weighs aprox 40 lbs. The cow and calf robes would be way more supple and versatile to work with. FWIW



























