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Bison Flips Grandpa in Yellowstone National Park

He's still pissed at what we did to his ancestors.

The traditional hunting culture of Plains Native Americans met its demise in the 1870s and 1880s, as commercial European-American hunters nearly exterminated the bison.

For a decade after 1873, there were several hundred, perhaps over a thousand, such commercial hide-hunting outfits harvesting bison at any one time, vastly exceeding the take by Native Americans or individual meat hunters.

In contrast to Indigenous practices, where hunters harvested only what was necessary and utilized every part of the animal, European settlers engaged in mass hunting for the skins and tongues of bison, leaving the rest of the carcass to waste away.

Trappers and traders earned their livelihoods by selling buffalo fur; during the winter of 1872–1873 alone, over 1.5 million buffalo were shipped by train to the east.
American-bison-extinction-photos-19.webp


One professional hunter killed over 20,000 by his count. The average prices paid the buffalo hunters from 1880 to 1884 were as follows.

For cow hides, $3; bull hides, $2.50; yearlings, $1.50; calves, $0.75 cents; and the cost of getting the hides to market brought the cost up to about $3.50 ($89.68 accounting for inflation) per hide.

The commercial take arguably was anywhere from 2,000 to 100,000 animals per day depending on the season, though there are no statistics available.

Due to the mass slaughter of bison during the 1870s, the plains bison population underwent a population bottleneck.

The population plummeted from an estimated 60 million individuals, as observed by Colonel R.I. Dodge along the Arkansas River in Kansas in 1871, to a founding population of around 100 individuals.

These survivors were divided into six herds, with five managed by private ranchers and one by the New York Zoological Park (now the Bronx Zoo).

Additionally, a wild herd of 25 individuals in Yellowstone National Park survived the bottleneck.

From the late 19th century onwards, the bison population gradually rose from 325 in 1884 to 500,000 in 2017, as a result of careful preservation and a general population boom.

American-bison-extinction-photos-06.webp
 
He's still pissed at what we did to his ancestors.

The traditional hunting culture of Plains Native Americans met its demise in the 1870s and 1880s, as commercial European-American hunters nearly exterminated the bison.

For a decade after 1873, there were several hundred, perhaps over a thousand, such commercial hide-hunting outfits harvesting bison at any one time, vastly exceeding the take by Native Americans or individual meat hunters.

In contrast to Indigenous practices, where hunters harvested only what was necessary and utilized every part of the animal, European settlers engaged in mass hunting for the skins and tongues of bison, leaving the rest of the carcass to waste away.

Trappers and traders earned their livelihoods by selling buffalo fur; during the winter of 1872–1873 alone, over 1.5 million buffalo were shipped by train to the east.
View attachment 114338

One professional hunter killed over 20,000 by his count. The average prices paid the buffalo hunters from 1880 to 1884 were as follows.

For cow hides, $3; bull hides, $2.50; yearlings, $1.50; calves, $0.75 cents; and the cost of getting the hides to market brought the cost up to about $3.50 ($89.68 accounting for inflation) per hide.

The commercial take arguably was anywhere from 2,000 to 100,000 animals per day depending on the season, though there are no statistics available.

Due to the mass slaughter of bison during the 1870s, the plains bison population underwent a population bottleneck.

The population plummeted from an estimated 60 million individuals, as observed by Colonel R.I. Dodge along the Arkansas River in Kansas in 1871, to a founding population of around 100 individuals.

These survivors were divided into six herds, with five managed by private ranchers and one by the New York Zoological Park (now the Bronx Zoo).

Additionally, a wild herd of 25 individuals in Yellowstone National Park survived the bottleneck.

From the late 19th century onwards, the bison population gradually rose from 325 in 1884 to 500,000 in 2017, as a result of careful preservation and a general population boom.

View attachment 114336
Yeah, history is kind of crazy how it repeats itself. Asia still doing that to the oceans
 
I was at Yellowstone years ago and was watching Bison from behind a fence. Signs were everywhere: DO NOT APPROACH WILDLIFE! A group of Japanese Tourist's were there cameras clicking away when one of the group crossed the fence so they could get a picture of him petting a Male Bison. A moment after he touched the Bison he was a good fifteen feet in the air when he came down he didn't move. The Bison went back to eating. The EMS got there in no time. I don't know what happened to the guy, but it was terminal stupidity. Blame Wildlife for being Wildlife? No. We have Deer and Raccoons around our home. Try to pet one? Only if you are STUPID.
 
I was at Yellowstone years ago and was watching Bison from behind a fence. Signs were everywhere: DO NOT APPROACH WILDLIFE! A group of Japanese Tourist's were there cameras clicking away when one of the group crossed the fence so they could get a picture of him petting a Male Bison. A moment after he touched the Bison he was a good fifteen feet in the air when he came down he didn't move. The Bison went back to eating. The EMS got there in no time. I don't know what happened to the guy, but it was terminal stupidity. Blame Wildlife for being Wildlife? No. We have Deer and Raccoons around our home. Try to pet one? Only if you are STUPID.
It's called "wild" life for a reason.
 
We have people that go rogue (look at Chicago) and we don’t put them down.
the old man and his grandson (at least one report called the kid a boy), were no where near the bison, being across the road, compared to the person (presumably family??) just behind him at that picnic table...there was no way the old man and kid were agitating the bison, or even close to it, by any means.

people in chicago, are in some respects...putting themselves down.
 
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