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Anatomy

The Biggest Elephant in the World

The biggest elephant in the world is the African bush elephant — the largest living land animal on Earth. But the single largest elephant ever recorded was a colossal bull shot in Angola in 1955, estimated at around 10,900 kg (24,000 lb) and standing four metres at the shoulder. It is so big it still greets visitors in the rotunda of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.

Quick answer: the African bush elephant is the biggest elephant species alive today, with big bulls weighing around 6,000 kg. The biggest individual ever recorded weighed roughly 10,900 kg — nearly double a typical bull. And if you count extinct relatives, an ancient elephant called Palaeoloxodon may have been the largest land mammal that ever lived.

Categories
Anatomy

How Much Does an Elephant Weigh? Size & Weight by Species

Elephants are the largest land animals on Earth — and the biggest of them all, the African bush elephant, can tip the scales at six tons or more. But weight varies a lot by species and sex, and the record-holders are heavier still. Here’s exactly how much an elephant weighs, how tall they stand, and the story of the biggest elephant ever recorded.

The short answer: an African bush elephant weighs about 6 tons (13,000 lb) for an adult male and ~3 tons for a female. Asian elephants average 4–5 tons, and the smaller African forest elephant 2–4 tons.