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・ Elephant Eyes
・ Elephant Family
・ Elephant Fayre
・ Elephant Festival
・ Elephant Field
・ Elephant fish
・ Elephant Flats
・ Elephant flow
・ Elephant Fury
・ Elephant Gambit
・ Elephant games
・ Elephant garlic
・ Elephant Gate and Tower, Carlsberg
・ Elephant goad
・ Elephant grass
Elephant gun
・ Elephant Gun (EP)
・ Elephant Head Lodge
・ Elephant Hill Provincial Park
・ Elephant Hotel
・ Elephant hotel
・ Elephant House
・ Elephant hunting in Chad
・ Elephant hunting in Kenya
・ Elephant in Cairo
・ Elephant in the room
・ Elephant in the room (disambiguation)
・ Elephant Island
・ Elephant Jason Island
・ Elephant joke


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Elephant gun : ウィキペディア英語版
Elephant gun

An elephant gun is a large caliber gun, rifled or otherwise, so named because they were originally developed for use by big-game hunters for elephants and other big game. They used black powder cartridges at first but later used smokeless powder.
== Early use ==

As Europeans made inroads into Africa in the early 19th century, guns were developed to handle the very large game encountered. This was for self-protection, food gathering, and later, more commonly, sport. The first guns were the simple muzzle-loading shotgun designs already used for birds and loaded with solid balls of lead for use on large game. Due to their ineffectiveness on the largest game (up to 35 shots being recorded by some writers for a single elephant), they soon developed into larger caliber black powder smoothbores. The caliber was still measured in bore or gauge—10, 8, 6, 4 bore, or even 2 bore—or the guns were named by number of projectiles per pound. The projectiles were lead round balls or short conical slugs, sometimes hardened with antimony.
These very large and very heavy firearms were the first to be known as the elephant guns of the black powder era (1850–1890), though their use also included all thick-skinned dangerous game such as rhinoceros, hippopotamus and cape buffalo. Due to the velocity limitations of black powder and lead—usually around —the only way to increase penetration was to make a larger gun. The largest bore guns in common use (and bore rifles with the advent of breech loading and rifling in the late 19th century) included the 4 bore, using a slug at up to . Despite their enormous power, the short low-velocity slugs still suffered the penetration issues which plagued guns of this era, particularly for the toughest shot of all: defeating the bone mass for a frontal brain shot on an elephant. Thus, dangerous game hunting in the 19th century was as much a test of the gun-bearer's ability to relay guns to the hunter, and of horsemanship to evade charges long enough to reload.〔
It was not until the parallel developments of jacketed projectiles, closely followed by smokeless powders in the late 19th century, that dangerous game could be taken with near 100% certainty.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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