clipped from: www.environmentalgraffiti.com   
attack

Queensland, Australia. Philip Mclean, a 16 year-old boy, and his brother, three years his junior, encounter a cassowary. Despite the size of the brightly coloured flightless bird before them, the Mclean brothers attempt to bludgeon it to death with clubs. It is a fatal mistake. Armed with its long- and sharp-clawed foot, the bird kicks the younger boy, who flees. His elder brother lands a blow on the beast but is knocked to the ground. Lying prone, Philip is kicked in the neck by the cassowary, opening a deadly wound. The boy manages to get up and run but dies shortly afterward as a result of a haemorrhaging blood vessel in his neck.


jekylandhyde

Philip Mclean’s death took place in 1926, but attacks on humans by the cassowary – viewed by many as the most dangerous bird alive – are not uncommon.

feet

Keep clear of the claw: At 12 cm long, it can do serious damage

lopsided

Cassowary comin’ atcha: It is a fast runner, able to reach 50 km/h

Hello beautiful: The coarse head feathers are brilliant, perhaps as a warning

hellobeautiful

signposts