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Elephants
From top left to right: the African bush elephant, the Asian elephant and African forest elephant.
From top left to right: the African bush elephant, the Asian elephant and African forest elephant.
Scientific classification
Included groups
Cladistically included but traditionally excluded groups
The African elephant, Loxodonta africana, in Luanga National Park, Zambia

Elephants are large grey animals with big ears, long noses and white tusks. They are the biggest living land mammals. The largest elephant recorded was shot in Angola, 1974. It weighed 27,060 lb (12.27 t) and stood 13 ft 8 in (4.17 m) tall.

At birth, an elephant calf may be as big as 100 kg (225 pounds). The baby elephant develops for 20 to 22 months inside its mother. No other land animal takes this long to develop before being born.

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