The most impressive horns and antlers

Reindeer:
The reindeer, also known as the caribou in North America, is a species of deer found in the Arctic tundra, northern Europe, Siberia, and North America.

Springbok:
Slender, graceful, and strikingly marked, springbok are a species of antelope found mainly in southern and southwestern Africa.

Mule deer:
A deer indigenous to western North America and among the most beloved and iconic wildlife of the American West, this species derives its name from its large ears.

Moose:
Moose are the largest of all the deer species. Males are immediately recognizable by their huge antlers, which can spread 1.82 m (6 ft) from end to end.

Pronghorn:
The pronghorn is native to North America, and is the fastest hoofed animal on that continent.

Red hartebeest:
The most colorful of the hartebeest family, the red hartebeest also has one of the most appealing profiles in the animal kingdom.

Nubian ibex:
Few animal species can match the horny splendor of the Nubian ibex, a desert-dwelling goat species found in arid mountainous areas of northern and northeast Africa, and the Middle East.

Addax:
the addax is recognized for its beautiful spiral horns found both on males and females.

Greater kudu:
The spiral horns of the male greater kudu, a species of antelope native to east and south Africa, are spectacular and can grow as long as 1.8 m, making two and a half graceful twists.

Blackbuck:
The blackbuck is an antelope native to India and Nepal. Males radiate a distinctly two-tone appearance, as if half of its inky black coat has been dipped in milk.

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