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Legendary MAN EATING LIONS were not that Hungry : Scientists

Chicago : IL : USA | about 1 month ago  
Views: 102
  • The Legendary Tsavo Lions
    The Legendary Tsavo Lions
    Posted by: RaulDeSouza
    The Legendary Tsavo Lions
  • The Legendary Tsavo Lions
    The Legendary Tsavo Lions
    Posted by: RaulDeSouza
    The Legendary Tsavo Lions
The Legendary Tsavo Lions

The Tsavo lions, reputed to have consumed 135 railroad workers in Africa at the turn of the last century, were not quite as ravenous as legend would have it. The lions—whose stuffed carcasses are enshrined at Chicago’s Field Museum—actually dispatched a mere 35 souls, new research shows. Scientists analyzed the duo’s bone fragments for evidence of homo sapiens in their diet. “The possible range is between 4 and 72 humans,” one tells the Tribune. “But 35 is most likely.” The museum acquired the lions’ skins from the Brit who killed them, Col. John H. Patterson. Patterson originally estimated the Tsavo pair had killed 28 and change, but later revised his estimate upward. The museum, which plans to revise its display materials, currently hedges its bets, saying “legend has it they killed and ate over 100 people.” But the new numbers do not diminish their “signal feat,” a museum official says. “They stopped the British Empire, at the height of its imperial power, literally in its tracks.”

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  • News Source: The Mercury News | about 1 month ago
    The mystery had all the makings of a Hollywood murder flick: an unsuspecting Kenyan village, two hungry lions and lots of blood and gore. The famed "man-eating lions of Tsavo" terrorized the railroad camp for nine months in 1898 and ate 135 people,...
  • News Source: The Daily Telegraph | about 1 month ago
    TWO man-eating lions terrorised Kenya during the building of a railroad bridge over the Tsavo River in the late 19th Century, but only one was making regular meals of human prey, researchers said. The lions attacked and devoured workers building the...
  • News Source: Star Tribune | about 1 month ago
    A lion is seen relaxing in its habitat on August 13, 2009 at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington, DC. Male lions weigh from A lion in its habitat at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington.
  • News Source: Chicago-Sun Times | about 1 month ago
    Staff Reporter/kspak@suntimes.com Maybe they should be called the man-snacking lions of Tsavo. The notorious pair of Kenyan lions, part of a popular Field Museum display, did not kill and feast on 135 people working on and near an African railroad in...
  • News Source: Arizona Republic | about 1 month ago
    The nightly attacks by two man-eating lions terrified railway workers and brought construction to a halt in one of east Africa's most notorious onslaughts more than a hundred years ago. But the death toll, scientists now say, wasn't as high as...
  • News Source: Honolulu Advertiser | about 1 month ago
    The Tsavo lions are both now stuffed and on display at the Field Museum in Chicago. Their killing spree inspired the 1996 movie "The Ghost and the Darkness." Scientists from the University of California at Santa Cruz have studied the lions' bones and...
Blogs
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  • Blog Source: scienceblogs.com
    By winter, a third of his food came from freshly killed humans. This was the animal that caused the lion's share of deaths among the railway workers, and Yeake estimates that he ate around 24, giving a total kill count of 35. ...
  • Blog Source: www.washingtonexaminer.com
    They may have been the world's most famous man-eating lions, but it turns out they made other dinner arrangements from time to time. ... Turns out famous man-eating Tsavo lions could push away from table from time to time ... Scientists from the
  • Blog Source: citybythesea.onlinefinder.com
    Though the study does diminish the number killed, it doesn't affect the reason for the Tsavo lions' notoriety, Bruce Patterson said. “The signal feat of the Tsavo lions is that they stopped the British Empire, at the height of its imperial power, ..
  • Blog Source: www.chicagotribunal.com
    For more than 80 years, the man-eating Tsavo lions have been one of the Field Museum's top tourist draws. Now a study released Monday suggests the Tsavo lions' taste for human flesh may have been exaggerated. tsavolions600.jpg ... The numbers killed
  • Blog Source: uaddit.com
    The Tsavo maneaters were a pair of notorious man-eating lions responsible for the deaths of a number of construction workers on the Kenya-Uganda Railway, from March through December 1898. ... John Henry Patterson led the construction of a railway
  • Blog Source: weirdthings.com
    Strikingly, the other lion ate very few humans, subsisting instead on herbivores. That dietary disparity leads Dominy and Yeakel to infer that the Tsavo lions worked together to scatter everyone, both humans and wild game, ...
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  • Posted By Shirley66 Shirley66 | about 1 month ago
    35 still are many. Though not as big as the first figure that came out.
  • Posted By ImSpazZ ImSpazZ | about 1 month ago
    Wow, maybe they should just stay away from the Lions yeah? =D
  • Posted By selegnasol selegnasol | about 1 month ago
    Who knew you shouldn't bother lions?
  • Posted By bobjohnbb bobjohnbb | about 1 month ago
    Quite awesome, but why would you bother lions in the first place, lol.
  • Posted By RaulDeSouza RaulDeSouza | about 1 month ago
    they didnt bother them...workers in africa were creating a railroad through the jungle...and the lions just got angry
  • Posted By wasem wasem | 25 days ago
    thx for sharing this
  • Posted By wasem wasem | 25 days ago
    i like it
  • Reported by RaulDeSouza
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