Monday, January 02, 2012

Blackbirds fall dead from the sky for second New Year's Eve in a row

Ancient Mayan legend says that 2012 will bring the end of the world. A small Arkansas town might have shown the first example of that as approximately 5,000 blackbirds dropped dead from the sky last night in the early hours of the new year. As if the incident was not strange enough, it is the second time in two years that the birds have fallen as the calendar year changes.



'I thought the Mayor was messing with me when he called me,' said Milton McCullar, the street department supervisor in Beebe, Arkansas. 'He got me up at 4:00 in the morning and told me we had birds falling out of he sky.' Mr McCullar said. Given the amount of birds and the condensed time and location of their deaths, there has to be some commonality behind the bizarre event, but scientists remain baffled.

The fact that the birds were even flying in the middle of the night makes no sense because that is not something that they are trained to do. 'Most of these birds don’t see any better at night than you or I do. They aren’t adapted to see at night like owls so if they went off from their perches at night they're blind at night just like you would be' said Dr Kevin McGowan, an ornithologist from Cornell University.


YouTube link.

Initially, last year's deaths were blamed on celebratory fireworks, with people thinking that the birds were startled to death. A flash hail storm or massive lightning strikes were all discussed as possibilities as well. All three theories have been debunked, however, as the weather was calm in Arkansas last night and police even imposed an impromptu firework ban in an effort to prevent it from happening again.

6 comments:

The Rat King said...

If they Mayans were so good at predicting stuff, they would have foreseen the Spanish wiping them out.

Bunch of rubbish.

kolymatram said...

fireworks
nothing more
if it were apocalyptic, there would have been other sorts of birds (geese, ducks,starlings...) as well. These are 1 flock which got frightened by something. Nothing more, nothing less. Poor animals.

shak said...

This may be the answer:

http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2011/0120/Bye-Bye-Blackbird-USDA-acknowledges-a-hand-in-one-mass-bird-death

Ratz said...

Cold weather can also kill them via alcohol poisoning. Berries freeze on the bushes, warmer weather causes them to defrost and start to ferment. Birds eat the berries and die from the alcohol they contain.

Brixter said...

Angry bird?

Gareth said...

Mass bird deaths like this are far from uncommon. Google it and you'll see. And they all have one thing in common, they are reported as if they are the first (or this case the second) occurrence of the type.