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Like other hartebeests, the Bubal was a social animal.
This is possibly the only Bubal preserved in the United States of America.
The Bubal Hartebeest was protected under the London Convention of 1933.
The Bubal Hartebeest ranged originally across Africa north of the Sahara, from Morocco to Egypt, where it disappeared earlier.
According to 19th century writers, the Bubal Hartebeest preferred rocky areas with a fair amount of vegetation, in contrast to the sandy and drier habitat of the Addax.
The northern limit of the Bubal Hartebeest's range was the Mediterranean coast; large herds were still reported existing in Morocco north of the Atlas Mountains in 1738.
Remains of Bubal Hartebeests have been found in several Egyptian archaeological sites such as Abadiyeh, Saqqara and Karanis, the last one dating to the early Middle Ages.
The Bubal Hartebeest is one of many extinct animals depicted in the Roman mosaics of Hippo Regius (modern Algeria) that date back to the 2nd and 4th centuries AD.
The Bubal Hartebeest was described as uniformly sandy colored, save for "an ill-defined patch of greyish on each side of the muzzle above the nostrils" and the terminal tuft of the tail, which was black.
Individuals of Bubal Hartebeest were sometimes captured and kept in British, French and German zoos around the start of the 20th century, although Ruxton and Schwarz (1929) failed to find any conserved in museums of these countries.
In Deuteronomy, it is traditionally been translated as wild goat, but in the same translations is called a wild ox where it occurs in Deutero-Isaiah; the Bubal Hartebeest lies somewhere between these creatures in appearance and has been regarded as a likely fit for the'o.
The Bubal Hartebeest, also known as Bubal Antelope or just Bubal (Alcelaphus buselaphus buselaphus) is the extinct nominal (i.e., first described) subspecies of hartebeest, that was formerly found north of the Saharan Desert.