Adam Karpowicz published these data of tensile modulus for sinew : 0,9 - 2,4 GPa in his book. He also mentioned this source, which I read and appreciate :
D.G.Hepworth J.P.Smith - 2002 - The mechanical properties of composites manufactured from tendon fibres and pearl glue (animal glue)
Free citations from it : "Dry bovine lover leg tendon was found to have a mean tensile modulus of 2,41 GPa and mean strength of 180 MPa. The mean failure strain was 25,6%. Tendon/glue composites formed with wet fibres ( 5cm long in 15 cm sample length and 7mm sample width ) at a fibre volume fraction of 50% were found to have a mean tensile modulus of 2,32 GPa and mean strength of 100 MPa. The mean failure strain was 20,6%. Maximum energy absorption - 18 MJ/m3."
Another values I found are : 2,81 GPa - 2,9 GPa - 1,24 Gpa ...
I also did two ( not very exact ) tests of slim "lateral digital extensor" from deer lover leg tendon in pure elongation and one test of sinew/gelatine layer in three point bending test ( using dial gauge ) personally and got similar results in the range of 2,4 to 2,9 Gpa and maybe more for "prestrained" tendon. ( Please see :
https://atarn.fi/t/grooving-core-before-sinewing/120/15 and up. There is also some modeling in VirtualBow. )
Hope it helps.