Man-Eating Lions - International Wildlife Museum
Transcription
Man-Eating Lions - International Wildlife Museum
Tsavo Man Eaters The Tsavo Man-Eaters were a pair of maneless male lions responsible for the deaths of at least 28 construction workers from March to December 1898 on the Kenya-Uganda Railway, a project led by Lt. Col. John Henry Patterson. During the first nine months of construction, the two lions stalked the workers’ campsite, dragging Indian workers from their tents at night and eating them. Crews attempted to scare off the lions by building thorn fences and campfires around their camp, but with little success. The lions crawled through the thorn fences and continued to attack. Hundreds of workers fled from Tsavo, and bridge construction stopped. Patterson set traps, and tried to ambush the lions from a tree. On December 9, 1898, he shot the first lion. It measured nine feet, eight inches from nose to the tip of its tail, and it took eight men to carry the carcass. Three weeks later, the second lion was also killed. In February 1899, the construction crew returned and completed the bridge. It is unknown exactly how many people the lions killed. Man-Eating Lions More recently, American and Tanzanian scientists reported that man-eating behavior in lions has increased. From 1990 to 2005, over 300 people were injured and at least 560 people were killed, many of which were eaten. The attacks occurred in Lindi Province and in Selous National Park, one of the largest game reserves in the world. In 2004, a man-eating lion believed to have eaten at least 35 people was killed in Southern Tanzania. It is speculated that the lion preyed on humans because it had a large abscess in one of its molars. Like the Tsavo man-eaters, this lion was large and lacked a mane. Though the Tsavo man-eaters are thought of as the most famous of any lion attacks, they are not the deadliest. During the late 1930’s and 1940’s in Tanzania, three generations of a lion pride were thought to have killed 1,500 to 2,000 people. The lion pride was eventually killed by a game warden and a professional hunter named George Rushby.