Up to 75 miles if they run for 12 hours without a break.
Yes, giraffes go in herds.
You can hunt for caribou in western Canada and Alaska. These two areas have the highest caribou population than anywhere else in the world. Many people hunt caribou in these areas each year.
The biggest mammal migration in the world isn't the wildebeest but the caribou,these reindeer migrate in massive herds thoughout the arctic.The elk is migratory to if thiers many of them,big herds could be seen in Yellowstone and the national elk refuge.In areas were elk populations are lower they migrate to the mountains in the summer months and go down towards lowlads during winter.
40mph.
Woodland caribou live in the arctic forests.
It can go 3 miles
There was a proposal to put them there on the Palmer (aka Antarctica or Graham) Peninsula. But that at the few islands off the coast (caribou often migrate over sea ice if the distances are not over a hundred miles or so) would only support a small heard. Compare that to the Sub Antarctic Island of Georgia which supports two herds, both transplanted starting the turn of the century so to have meat for the whalers on a seafood diet. Most of those lichen lands are islands between the glaciers or snow fields only.
youed go 6 miles
3.75 miles an hour.
15 miles
A caribou can run at least 100 km per hour
No they don't because that is when people go hunting for them!