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Mountain Lion Kills Skier
by Keith McCafferty 
Tracks show cougar stalked victim before attack.
A mountain lion killed a cross-country skier
in Canada's Banff National Park in January. The victim, a 30-year-old woman, was
skiing near Lake Minnewanka, about 6 miles outside the town of Banff, when she
was attacked. Park wardens shot the 132-pound cat, which appeared to be in
excellent health, as it stood over the woman's body. Tracks indicated that it
had been stalking the victim, who may not have known of its presence until it
launched the fatal attack.
According to lion expert Keith Aune of Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, most
aggressive lion encounters with humans occur during summer and fall months, when
game is scattered and difficult for lions to find. Canadian wardens surmised
that one possible reason for the January encounter was that a pack of wolves had
settled in the area, and lions were coming closer to town to avoid competition
and feed on wintering elk. The fatality, the first ever recorded in Alberta, is
the 16th this century in North America‹three-quarters of which have occurred
in the last 25 years. Lions maul about 14 people each year in Canada and the
western United States.

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Cougars feed mostly on deer and elk,
but a hungry cat will prey on any animal that is convenient. |
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