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There are no fewer than 13,659 places named after elephants, on every continent — except the Arctic. And we say this in the full knowledge one of you is about to send us a photo of you standing in front of an Elephant Bar & Grill on Baffin Bay.

Spoiler alert. Some entries in the Table make veiled reference to entries elsewhere in the Table. Some of you tell us you’ve enjoying discovering these associations on your own, so maybe hold off reading these rubric items until you’ve spent time with the Table as a whole. Which, if you can’t spring for the print version right now, you’ll find it here.

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32 | Elephant Lake

Aka Spirit Lake, this is on Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula. It is alternately open or closed to the public by the local tribal council depending on degree of vandalism to the surrounding park. Elephant Lake is nice for silver and rainbow trout.

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33 | Mammoth Cave

The longest known cave system in the world, Mammoth Cave is 668 kilometers (or 415 miles) in length. Mammoth Cave is home to the endangered Kentucky Cave Shrimp, a sightless albino shrimp. Common fossils found in the cave include blastoids and gastropods, but no mammoths.

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34 | Elephant and Castle

The Elephant and Castle has two linked London Underground stations on the Northern and Bakerloo lines. The name is derived from a coaching inn, which Shakespeare mentions in Twelfth Night, in Act 3, Scene 3, when Antonio says “In the south suburbs, at the Elephant, is best to lodge.” Nearby, on some nights, the London College of Communication appears out of the mists to the howls of wolves.

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35 | De Olifant

Originally built in 1856 at Oostwold, it drained the Oosterwolderpolder. In 1867, it was moved to Burdaard, whereupon it drained the Olifantpolder.

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36 | Elephant Mound

A prehistoric earthwork near Wyalusing, Wisconsin, it draws its name from its massive form and prolongation of the effigy’s nose Some hold it to be evidence that local Indians once lived contemporaneously with mastodons; some think it’s just a bear with a big nose.

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37 | Elephant Graveyard

It was long believed the Legendary Elephant Graveyard was a secret place old elephants went to die.

Currently, demand in the EU for legal antique ivory continues to fuel the ongoing poaching of living elephants; Japan continues to import great quantities of ivory. In 2017, Donald Trump lifted a ban on ivory imports from Zimbabwe that had been implemented by Barack Obama.

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46 | Elephant of the Bastille

Conceived in 1808 by Napoléon I, this monument was to be made from bronze and located in the Place de la Bastille. However, only a plaster full-scale model was ever built. At 24 meters (78 feet) high, it featured in Hugo’s Les Misérables, giving shelter to the street urchin Gavroche. When in 1848 its neighbors complained rats had infested the elephant, it was finally removed.

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47 | Elephant Mountain

You would be hard pressed to find a single nation on Earth without an Elephant Mountain.

Fine, Lichtenstein does not have one. But it does have an Elephant Hill that is very steep.

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48 | Elephant Island

Not to be confused with Elephanta Island, Elephant Jason Island, Elephantine Island, Elephants Island, or all the other Elephant Islands, the best-known Elephant Island is an uninhabited mountainous island (probably it has an Elephant Mountain) off the coast of Antarctica.

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49 | Elephant Arch

Elephant Arch is a natural sandstone formation in the Red Cliffs National Conservation Area in northern Utah. Surrounding it are numerous towers and fins, including Parade of Elephants. The trail is a sandy wash, so plan on a workout for your calves.

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50 | Elephant Butte

Having volcanic core similar to Devils Tower in Wyoming, it is an island on Elephant Butte Reservoir. Double Arch, a feature of Elephant Butte, appeared as a backdrop for the opening scene of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (co-written by Tom Stoppard, of all people). In 2014, just beneath the surface of the sandy beach, a bachelor party stumbled across a stegomastodon skull in excellent condition. It was awesome.

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51 | Elephant Building

A rare architectural expression of Whimsical Neo-Brutalism, this 32-story urban complex houses a shopping mall, business offices, and luxury condos. Its tusks are balconies, its eyes are huge windows, and its tail is comprised of twenty stories of smoked-glass enclosed rooms that jut from its rear.

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52 | Elephant Hotel

Until the construction of the Elephant Building (No. 51) in 1997, this was the world’s largest elephant. Built in 1881 as a real estate gimmick, “Lucy the Elephant” has served as a hotel, a restaurant, and a beach house. It’s now a tourist attraction inviting visitors to experience the thrill of standing inside a six-story elephant.

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