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  1. Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    689
    #1
    Monday September 4, 02:28 PM
    Steve Irwin dead in stingray attack
    By 7News

    Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin has been killed in a stingray attack near Cairns on Australia's far north coast.
    It was believed Irwin had been swimming off the coast of Cairns when he was stung.

    "It is understood he was killed by a stingray barb that went through his chest," Brisbane's Courier Mail reported this afternoon.

    Irwin was best known for his documentary series "The Crocodile Hunter".

    He was born in Victoria and found his love of animals after following in his father's footsteps, volunteering his services to the Queensland Government's East Coast Crocodile Management program.

    He spent years living on his own in the mosquito infested creeks, rivers and mangroves of North Queensland, catching huge crocodiles single-handed.

    In June 1992, he married American Terri Raines after they met when she visited Irwin's Australia Zoo.

    The 44-year-old is survived by his wife and two children.

    http://au.news.yahoo.com/060904/23/10ebv.html

  2. Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Posts
    11,316
    #2
    so sad...i had fun watching this guy in his shows..never seen anyone with more passion and enthusiasm..rip...

  3. Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Posts
    1,311
    #3
    Tsk... to think in the end a stingray got to him... i would have expected a croc...

    may he rest in peace.

  4. #4
    IS this true? I thought sting rays are gentle creatures and non aggressive, unless you accidentally steppend on them or whatever.


    just asking.

  5. Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    2,421
    #5
    enjoy ko din sya sa TV...he will be missed.

  6. Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Posts
    1,220
    #6
    kawawa naman.....sino kaya papalit sa kanya sa animal planet?
    tiyak masaya ngayon mga crocodiles hehe

  7. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    13,415
    #7
    At least namatay sya doing what he loves...

    I really think that these guys sa mga nature shows will get into trouble sooner or later with wildlife, though I'm sure they expect/accept the fact that they could get killed anyday by the creatures that they admire.

  8. Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    1,013
    #8
    sayang. ayos pa naman yung show nya..

  9. #9
    nga, sa lahat ng hosts sa animal planet, i find him the most diiferent, may matching action pa nga minsan,e!

    sa reruns nalang ulit siya mapapanood nalang

  10. Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Posts
    1,220
    #10
    yung stingray diba page yun?

    dun sa probinsya ginagamit yung buntot ng page sa mga aswang

  11. Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Posts
    516
    #11
    May he rest in peace. a great lost to the animal world.

  12. Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    739
    #12
    I guess it was destiny.

    "He who lives by the sword, dies by the sword".

    Aryton Senna killed in a grand prix crash.
    Madame Curie died from radiation.
    Owen Hart died from a wrestling stunt.
    Steve Erwin getting killed by an exotic wildlife.

    Even the scientist who discovered the SARS virus was killed by the same virus....

    I guess Steve already knew how he would die. He simply have to face it and continue doing what he loves and not get scared by it.

  13. Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    130
    #13
    Quote Originally Posted by city View Post
    IS this true? I thought sting rays are gentle creatures and non aggressive, unless you accidentally steppend on them or whatever.


    just asking.
    They are still considered as wild animals.

    The last thing we want to read in the news is somebody getting killed by a panda.

  14. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    10,620
    #14
    he got once in the hotseat nung kasam niya yung baby niya with a crocodile di ba...

    RIP

  15. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    3,883
    #15
    deadly talaga pag sa chest tinamaan...do a search on stingrays...
    tsk tsk sayang talaga...ibang klase talaga ang passion nya sa kanyang profession...the way he handled the crocs, talagang nakakabilib!!!

  16. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    10,620
    #16
    he got once in the hotseat nung kasam niya yung baby niya with a crocodile di ba...

    RIP

  17. Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    989
    #17
    Didn't know it was him till I checked the news link and saw the pic. Oks nga yung passion niya for what he did. A sad thing what happened.

    RIP
    Last edited by Autobeat; September 4th, 2006 at 02:26 PM.

  18. Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Posts
    161
    #18
    From the experts:

    "What you see is what you get" is an expression that doesn’t always apply. This is true of the stingray that seemingly has no visible barb stinger. But don’t be deceived! According to Dr. Bob Shipp, Ph.D. professor of the University of Alabama and authority on fishes of the Gulf of Mexico, the barb may be concealed within a sheathlike tail wrapping, depending on its size and species. The barb, or spine, according to Dr. Shipp, can grow back if broken off, and is actually a modified scale, armored with recurved serrations that are as sharp as razors. The stingray has the ability to whip its tail up over its back and strike a victim. During the strike the tail sheath covering instantly moves back to expose the barb, located about one third the way down its tail (bluntnose and Atlantic species). In some instances it can whip its tail around a victim to exert a more powerful blow.

    Never underestimate the penetrating ability of a stingray’s barb, even on the smallest of stingrays. The stingray’s barb is designed to penetrate virtually all sorts of dense materials, including wood and leather. And as unbelievable as it may seem, it’s been documented that large stingrays are able to drive a barb through a boat’s wooden planks or completely through a persons arm or leg.

    According to Dr. Shipp, when a stingray strikes, it either removes its barb entirely, or breaks it off inside of the victim. When this occurs, doctors must probe the wound to make sure all particles have been removed, so the injury will not result in gangrene. In cases where the barb deeply penetrated, the wound must be enlarged to make sure it is properly cleaned.

    Aside from the pain and serious laceration caused by the razor-sharp barb, which can sever arteries and possibly an Achilles tendon, a poison is released that can produce a drastic decrease in blood pressure, increased pulse, dizziness and possible shock.


    http://www.jerrylabella.com/stingray.html

  19. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    2,716
    #19
    tsk tsk tsk kawawa naman.

  20. Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    1,577
    #20
    Quote Originally Posted by IPSG_SlimShady View Post
    From the experts:

    "What you see is what you get" is an expression that doesn’t always apply. This is true of the stingray that seemingly has no visible barb stinger. But don’t be deceived! According to Dr. Bob Shipp, Ph.D. professor of the University of Alabama and authority on fishes of the Gulf of Mexico, the barb may be concealed within a sheathlike tail wrapping, depending on its size and species. The barb, or spine, according to Dr. Shipp, can grow back if broken off, and is actually a modified scale, armored with recurved serrations that are as sharp as razors. The stingray has the ability to whip its tail up over its back and strike a victim. During the strike the tail sheath covering instantly moves back to expose the barb, located about one third the way down its tail (bluntnose and Atlantic species). In some instances it can whip its tail around a victim to exert a more powerful blow.

    Never underestimate the penetrating ability of a stingray’s barb, even on the smallest of stingrays. The stingray’s barb is designed to penetrate virtually all sorts of dense materials, including wood and leather. And as unbelievable as it may seem, it’s been documented that large stingrays are able to drive a barb through a boat’s wooden planks or completely through a persons arm or leg.

    According to Dr. Shipp, when a stingray strikes, it either removes its barb entirely, or breaks it off inside of the victim. When this occurs, doctors must probe the wound to make sure all particles have been removed, so the injury will not result in gangrene. In cases where the barb deeply penetrated, the wound must be enlarged to make sure it is properly cleaned.

    Aside from the pain and serious laceration caused by the razor-sharp barb, which can sever arteries and possibly an Achilles tendon, a poison is released that can produce a drastic decrease in blood pressure, increased pulse, dizziness and possible shock.


    http://www.jerrylabella.com/stingray.html
    Knowledgeable read... thanks sir. Grabe pala 'tong mga stingray na 'to. And by the way I see them being touched and lifted by the ones over on TV, I never would have thought that they aren't as "friendly" as what they seem.

    Remember ko tuloy ung story ng frog at stingray.

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Animal Planet host/Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin Killed by Sting Ray