Agreed, and not at all surprised by the pictures of those recovered bullets. They did the job!
However, my experience with bears is different than some of what I am reading here. Have hunted for bears myself a lot, guided hunters, and have lost track of how many I have put in the freezer. Bacon, burgers, smoked ribs, blackstrap medallions, chops, stews, and cured hams are all delicious, so hunt them most Spring seasons.
Bears are not difficult to kill. Both black and grizzlies have thin skin and die quickly to properly placed lung shots with high speed bullets. I recovered only one really big grizzly that had two expanded .284 bullets, Nosler Partitions, in the lungs when we dressed the bear. It had been shot by an RCMP member the previous year. He had told me the story about trying to track the bear for two days with a dog and never recovering the bear.
The next Spring I was with a friend of mine on a river trip when he got that bear. That is the ONLY bear I have ever seen that did not die quickly with good hits from high speed bullets. Both lungs had healing scars from the bullets, which had expanded to the partition.
Having said that, I have been privileged to have to track and dig out bears wounded with poorly placed shots. As posted above by Denver Steve they are very good at finding and crawling into the most amazing places to hide.
270 Winchester, 7X57, 280 Remington, 30-06, all of the magnums, anything driving an expandable bullet at 3000 fps or thereabouts are all are very good bear medicine in my opinion.
My experience with cup and core bullets at those velocities on bears is that they penetrate hide easily, open up very quickly, shred lung tissue extensively, and kill quickly. This is especially true on bears that are not aware of your presence or excited.
What they do not do is break bone easily, and occasionally that can open up a brand new adrenaline charged experience in tracking for you.
I think those bullets performed well on the bears taken with them. My apology for the brief derailment.
Ted