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Grizzly bear kills hiker in Denali National Park

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Bocefish

I did bad things, privileges revoked!
In the Dog House
Mar 26, 2010
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Usually somewhere between flippant and glib.
Another dumbass trying to get too close to a wild animal...

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A hiker in Alaska's Denali National Park photographed a grizzly bear for at least eight minutes before the bear mauled and killed him in the first fatal attack in the park's history, officials said Saturday.

Investigators have recovered the camera and looked at the photographs, which show the bear grazing and not acting aggressively before the attack, Denali Park Superintendent Paul Anderson said.

The hiker was backpacking alone along the Toklat River on Friday afternoon when he came within 50 yards of the bear, far closer than the quarter-mile of separation required by park rules, officials said.

"They show the bear grazing in the willows, not acting aggressive in any form or manner during that period of time," Anderson said.

Investigators have identified the man but won't release his name until they've notified his family. They said he's a U.S. citizen but declined to release any other information about him. Rangers were hoping to recover his remains later Saturday after ensuring the scene was safe. Several other bears have been seen in the area.
Officials learned of the attack after hikers stumbled upon an abandoned backpack along the river about three miles from a rest area on Friday afternoon. The hikers also spotted torn clothing and blood. They immediately hiked back and alerted staff park.

Rangers in a helicopter spotted a large male grizzly bear sitting on the hiker's remains, which they called a "food cache" in the underbrush about 100 to 150 yards from the site of the attack on Friday. A state trooper shot and killed the bear on Saturday, and investigators will examine its stomach contents and use other tests to confirm it's the animal that killed the hiker.

There's no indication that the man's death was the result of anything other than a bear attack, investigators said, adding that it's the first known fatal mauling in the park's nearly century-long history.

"Over the years, and especially since the 1970s, the park has worked very diligently to minimize the conflict between humans and wildlife in the park," Anderson said. "We have some of the most stringent human-wildlife conflict regulations in the National Park system, and I think those are largely responsible for the fact that there hasn't been a fatal attack."

Park officials said they don't believe other registered backpackers are in the immediate area. That portion of the park is closed but other wilderness areas remain open, officials said.

Prior to receiving a permit to hike in the area, all backpackers in the park receive mandatory bear awareness training that teaches them to stay at least a quarter-mile away from bears, and to slowly back away if they find themselves any closer. Investigators confirmed that the hiker had received that training.

http://news.yahoo.com/grizzly-bear-kill ... 27091.html
 
Geez, it's not like the bear didn't warn the jackass. :doh: Note to self: when animal gets angry at me and shows it, I better leave the premises quickly and quietly in a non threatening manner before it eats me! Derp!
 
Megaclit said:
And they had to kill the bear of course, for.. what? For behaving like a bear?
That's the saddest part of when people act foolishly in the wild. Same thing eventually happened with "grizzly man," Timothy Treadwell, whose poorly thought out actions ended up with two bears being shot.
 
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Nordling said:
Megaclit said:
And they had to kill the bear of course, for.. what? For behaving like a bear?
That's the saddest part of when people act foolishly in the wild. Same thing eventually happened with "grizzly man," Timothy Treadwell, whose poorly thought out actions ended up with two bears being shot.
Did they shoot the bears? I loved the doc, but I don't remember them shooting the bears. I don't doubt it, mind you.
 
lordmagellan said:
Nordling said:
Megaclit said:
And they had to kill the bear of course, for.. what? For behaving like a bear?
That's the saddest part of when people act foolishly in the wild. Same thing eventually happened with "grizzly man," Timothy Treadwell, whose poorly thought out actions ended up with two bears being shot.
Did they shoot the bears? I loved the doc, but I don't remember them shooting the bears. I don't doubt it, mind you.
Yeah, the first bear, which was older and "refused" to leave his kills and the forest rangers shot him when he threatened them. The second bear, was a younger one, an opportunist and came on the scene after both victims were killed. My understanding is, that once a bear kills or tastes a human, the policy is to kill them in the belief that they are now a danger to other bears, since their behavior could encourage other bears to lose their fear of humans.
 
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