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ANNED
There were heavy thunder storms in that area on Aug 26 and i would have to believe lightning strike got the elk.
I have seen lightning kill hundreds of cows in a feedlot so its not unusual
Rezlooper
reply to post by SeekingDepth
That's one of the things I was thinking about to. The gas would surely have dissipated or been swept away from that area by the time the bear or the people who discovered the elks would have come along. But, how come only the elk if a plume of deadly gas came upon them? I think that maybe most small creatures may have scooted along once the elk came into that particular area. They are rather large animals. I'm no wildlife expert, but just seems likely that smaller creatures would have boot-scooted away.
That's one of the things I was thinking about to. The gas would surely have dissipated or been swept away from that area by the time the bear or the people who discovered the elks would have come along. But, how come only the elk if a plume of deadly gas came upon them? I think that maybe most small creatures may have scooted along once the elk came into that particular area. They are rather large animals. I'm no wildlife expert, but just seems likely that smaller creatures would have boot-scooted away.