Posts Tagged ‘Mystery’

Big cats prowl the bush

Monday, December 6th, 2010
Amplify’d from www.theaustralian.com.au

HELICOPTERS hover noisily overhead, the occupants scanning the sheep-filled paddocks, undulating grassy terrain fringed with dark, forbidding bush.

DSE officials were stumped, and they were pulling out all stops to try to solve the mystery that had so far cost a Victorian farmer thousands of dollars in lost stock – and threatened the credibility of the department. Trapping, snaring and fur traps had all failed to reveal the true nature of the beast, so thermal imaging equipment was employed in an eleventh-hour bid to halt the stock losses. There was talk of wild dogs at the time, but none of the corpses bore the hallmarks of dog attacks. There was no mess and little blood, and most of the corpses were devoid of flesh with only head, hide and hooves left behind. It was, for the most part, a clean, clinical kill every time.
Just as unusual – and even more disturbing – was the discovery early one morning of several sheep standing in a field, their faces mauled beyond recognition. They were still alive – just – but where a snout should have protruded from each woolly face there was now just a mass of red, shredded flesh and broken cartilage and bone.

Read more at www.theaustralian.com.au

 

It is interesting – I think the dingo did it

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

I remember all this happening when I was a child – I never thought Lindy did it. I blame the dingo. I have Lindy’s book somewhere here too

IT will go down as Australia’s greatest mystery. The death of Azaria Chamberlain, 30 years ago, remains unsolved. The police file is still officially open.

The third and final inquest in 1995 recorded the cause and manner of Azaria’s death as “unknown”. Two previous inquiries raised the possibility of death by dingo, followed by human intervention.

More questions. Like so much else about the case, the answers depends on what you want to believe.

Lindy Chamberlain’s conviction for murder was overturned, as was Michael’s for being an accessory. She didn’t do it. It is accepted that a dingo did.

But how did the dingo rip Azaria from a bassinet in her family’s tent and drag her over the sand, then remove her body from her buttoned jumpsuit and turn the singlet, which was inside the jumpsuit, inside out?

And then leave the baby’s matinee jacket, which was found six years later 153m away, without opening the top button?

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/national/did-a-dingo-really-do-it-well-never-know/story-e6frfkvr-1225903713717#ixzz0wFNQIjpp

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  • Jury notes disclose deliberations during Lindy Chamberlain trial (telegraph.co.uk)
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Mystery of elusive Blue Mountains cat

Saturday, August 7th, 2010

TWO T-bone steaks, a can of Whiskas and an audio recording of a cat purr – if they’re out there, we’ll find them.

With sightings exploding in the past decade, we’ve decided it’s time to track down once and for all the elusive Blue Mountains panther.

The cats are photo shy. But despite the lack of any physical evidence, Hawkesbury locals have fingered the panther in hundreds of livestock deaths.

As one believer put it: “The cats are out there – and they’re breeding.”

Farmers, wildlife rangers and conspiracy theorists take photos of scratchings on trees and collect scat samples, hairs and “panther paws” moulds.

There have been more than 460 sightings in the Hawkesbury since 2001, making it the big cat capital of Australia

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw-act/mystery-of-elusive-blue-mountains-cat/story-e6freuzi-1225902290900

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