Skip to content

Travel Bug Dog Tag Echo the Elephant

Trackable Options
Found this item? Log in.
Printable information sheet to attach to Echo the Elephant Print Info Sheet
There are 2 users watching this listing.
Owner:
TheAuthorityFigures Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Origin:
Arizona, United States
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

This is not collectible.

Use TB7GEQW to reference this item.

First time logging a Trackable? Click here.

Current Goal

Travel the world and see beautiful places and meet kind and interesting people.

About This Item

Echo leading the way!

http://www.wcs.org/our-work/species/african-elephants?gclid=CPD8luWZysoCFVJhfgodqvsEpQ

Did you Know?

• Elephants are the largest land animals in the world.

• The largest elephant on record was an adult male African elephant. It weighed about 24,000 pounds and was 13 feet tall at the shoulder!

• Elephants can live to be over 70 years old.

• Only one mammal can’t jump — the elephant.

• The average weight for an elephant heart is about 27 to 46 pounds!

• Elephants have a highly developed brain and the largest of all the land mammals. The brain is 3 or 4 times larger than that of humans although smaller as a proportion of body weight.

• Elephants have a slow pulse rate of 27. For a canary it is 1000!

• An elephant’s skin is an inch thick.

• Elephants have poor eyesight but an amazing sense of smell.

• At the age of 16, an elephant can reproduce, but rarely has more than four children throughout her lifetime. At birth, an elephant calf weighs about 230 lbs!

• Elephants have the longest pregnancy of all the animals. It takes a female 22 months from conception to give birth.

• Elephants purr like cats do, as a means of communication.

• Elephants prefer one tusk over the other, just as people are either left or right-handed.

• Tusks are an elephant’s incisor teeth. They are used for defense, digging for water, and lifting things.

• Elephants have four molars, one on the top and one on the bottom on both sides of the mouth. One molar can weigh about five pounds and is the size of a brick!

• The elephant trunk has more than 40,000 muscles in it.

• Elephants waive their trunks up in the air and from side to side to smell better.

• The elephant’s trunk is able to sense the size, shape and temperature of an object. An elephant uses its trunk to lift food and suck up water then pour it into its mouth.

• Elephants cry, play, have incredible memories, and laugh.

• Elephants can swim – they use their trunk to breathe like a snorkel in deep water.

• Elephant feet are covered in a soft padding that help uphold their weight, prevent them from slipping, and dull any sound. Therefore elephants can walk almost silently!

• Elephants use their feet to listen, they can pick up sub-sonic rumblings made by other elephants, through vibrations in the ground. Elephants are observed listening by putting trunks on the ground and carefully positioning their feet.

• Elephants are highly sensitive and caring animals. if a baby elephant complains, the entire family will rumble and go over to touch and caress it. Elephants express grief, compassion, self-awareness, altruism and play.

• Elephants have greeting ceremonies when a friend that has been away for some time returns to the group.

• Elephants have large, thin ears. Their ears are made up of a complex network of blood vessels which regulate an elephant’s temperature. Blood is circulated through their ears to cool them down in hot climates.

• An elephant is capable of hearing sound waves well below our human hearing limitation. The far reaching use of high pressure infrasound opens the elephant’s spatial experience far beyond our limited capabilities.

• Elephants are social creatures. They sometimes “hug” by wrapping their trunks together in displays of greeting and affection.

Elephants pay homage to the bones of their dead, gently touching the skulls and tusks with their trunks and feet. when an elephant walks past a place that a loved one has died, he/she will stop dead still; a silent and empty pause that can last several minutes.

Gallery Images related to Echo the Elephant

View All 2 Gallery Images

Tracking History (11448.6mi) View Map

Mark Missing 2/15/2018 TheAuthorityFigures marked it as missing   Visit Log

The owner has set this Trackable as missing.

Discovered It 4/23/2017 TeamDjango discovered it   Visit Log

Set i "GOLDGASE" ved Marstrup.

Dropped Off 2/17/2017 Satellite70 placed it in -= GOLDGASE =- Denmark - 5,320.9 miles  Visit Log
Retrieve It from a Cache 1/14/2017 Satellite70 retrieved it from Awesome Rocks New Mexico   Visit Log

Going to Denmark with me ....

Dropped Off 1/7/2017 Clydes son placed it in Awesome Rocks New Mexico - 16.71 miles  Visit Log
Retrieve It from a Cache 12/26/2016 Clydes son retrieved it from City of Rocks - NMSP Diamond Anniversary New Mexico   Visit Log

Neat to find this in a cache. We will make sure that it gets a new home soon.

Dropped Off 12/12/2016 mvanwin placed it in City of Rocks - NMSP Diamond Anniversary New Mexico - 1,509.34 miles  Visit Log
Retrieve It from a Cache 10/7/2016 mvanwin retrieved it from Amen Corner Ohio   Visit Log

Fun info. Will take it from Ohio to Missouri.

Dropped Off 10/1/2016 rustybarnacle placed it in Amen Corner Ohio - 217.53 miles  Visit Log
Visited 10/1/2016 rustybarnacle took it to Amen Corner Ohio - 2.14 miles  Visit Log
data on this page is cached for 3 mins