A cow is a mature female bovine, and these mature female bovines are not 9 months of age, rather their over 2 years of age. If you are referring to a HEIFER, though, it depends on her breeding. Some may weigh around 700 lbs, the more smaller breeds only 500 lbs, and the larger breeds around 950 lbs.
Beef cattle will weigh about 800-1000 lbs, while dairy cattle will weigh about 600-800 lbs. Keep in mind that this will vary from each breed and depend on how the calf grows and the quality of feed being consumed.
A cow is a mature female bovine, and these mature female bovines are not 10 months of age, rather their over 2 years of age. If you are referring to a HEIFER, though, it depends on her breeding. Some may weigh around 800 lbs, the more smaller breeds only 500 lbs, and the larger breeds around 1000 lbs.
The answer to this question is totally dependent on what breed that this 15 month-old so-called "cow" is.
There is no such thing as a "bull cow." Either you are talking about a bull, or a "cow" which would be a weanling heifer. As such this all depends on the breed of that animal.
This depends on the breed. Smaller breeds may only weigh around 70 to 80 lbs at 1 month of age; other breeds that are larger can weigh around 200 or 300 lbs at this age.
A Belgian Blue cow can weigh an average of around 1500 lbs.
The pectoral muscle on a cow will vary depending on the type of cow it is and how big it is. A cow's pectoral muscle can weigh a couple hundred pounds.
1/4 of a whole butchered cow
1000 lbs
about 16.6% of what it weighs on Earth
~1200lbs
Around 3 to 4 pounds, depending on the size of cow and what she's fed.
As Much As monkey poo with a moo moo cow in it
This depends on the weight of the truck and the type of truck, the size and weight of the cow, etc.