SnowAlien wrote: ↑Tue Apr 30, 2024 10:26 pm
SkaredShtles wrote: ↑Tue Apr 30, 2024 4:05 pm
Pictures of disemboweled bovine. So hot right now.
I like this quote:
"According to the latest research, which studied worldwide data from 2002 to 2020, the risks associated with a wolf attack are “above zero, but far too low to calculate.” "
https://wolf.org/wolf-info/factsvsficti ... to-humans/
So sorta along the lines of winning the lottery. Ain't gonna happen.
This statistics is for sparsely populated area (Alaska - 773k spread over a huge territory). Now we're talking about Colorado - nearly 6 mln people crammed into what looks like a suburban sprawl between Denver and Vail, with a bunch of ski towns.
p.s. you kinda defying your nickname by being so brave on the wolves issue.
Dawg, the quoted excerpt is
literally one sentence and states that the research "studied
worldwide data".

I'll give you a couple of additional hints from the abstract of the research paper:
This report seeks to update our knowledge for the period 2002 to 2020. We searched the peer-reviewed literature, technical reports, online news media sources and contacted regional experts to gather as much information as possible. Our coverage for Europe and North America is likely to be high
and
Attacks were found in Canada, USA, Croatia, Poland, Italy, Iran, Iraq, Israel, India, Kirgizstan, Turkey, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Russia, Mongolia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan and Saudi Arabia.
That's where the researchers found credible attacks and is not an exhaustive list of places they looked. Either way, the statistics are for far more than Alaska and in places far more highly and densely populated than Alaska and the numbers are still extremely low.