The hair on the back of your neck...

Grizzly and cougars bury it where it lays. A grizzly will drag it, if it is light enough to hide it in a bushy area. Then they bury it.
A pack of wolves will almost consume the whole animal before moving on. A full grown timber wolf can eat 20 - 25 lbs in a day. A grizzly can eat 90 lbs of meat in a day. A cougar can eat 20 or 30 lbs of meat in a meal.
 
Grizzly and cougars bury it where it lays. A grizzly will drag it, if it is light enough to hide it in a bushy area. Then they bury it.
A pack of wolves will almost consume the whole animal before moving on. A full grown timber wolf can eat 20 - 25 lbs in a day. A grizzly can eat 90 lbs of meat in a day. A cougar can eat 20 or 30 lbs of meat in a meal.

Find one of these, hang around and you might very well bag a wolf.

Grizz
 
If you are asking, seriously, if the elk died - perhaps of "old age" - not likely - do not think that happens much in the wild - when an animal gets a tiny bit past its prime, a predator will likely take it. When predators get hunger - like a 15 or 20 member pack of wolves - I don't know of many prey animals that can withstand them - no matter how fit they are.
Then, as mentioned, so-called "hunters" in a 6 point zone shoot a 5 point, discover their mistake and walk away. It happens, every year... Also, most game species have been shot at, hit, but "hunter" not skilled enough to follow up and to recover it - the animal dies - scavengers and predators eat... My brother took a very nice 6x6 elk - got it mounted - found a three bladed arrow head embedded in its brisket - he was not the first guy with a chance at that big guy!!!
 
So this morning I'm out with two friends about 2 miles away from the grizzly kill scene I posted. We are sitting in a cutblock at first light watching a bull elk at about 600 yards slowly moving along the edge of the bush and it dissaperars over the hill. We walk up to the top of the hill and there he is at 100, 200, 300 yards gone...
Being chased by two grizzlies at full speed!
You can't make this stuff up!!
 
These wolves are a good size
A size 12 boot comparison
pZCi5oBl.jpg
 
Wolf tracks - was shown a scene in Western Alberta two falls ago - what appeared to be a single track coming out of bush on right side, crossed a trail and into bush on left side - followed that "track" - once in cover, and less snow, it split into at least 5 or 6 separate sets of tracks. They were one the move - one behind the other, and placing paws step for step - as if the guy in front is breaking trail and the rest use the easy path. I had been told it was often the alpha male leading, with the alpha female bringing up the rear of the string - or might be the other way around - kids and subordinates were in between, though...
 
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