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Edith
4th September 2006, 03:14 PM
'Crocodile Hunter' Irwin killed

The naturalist worked to protect Australian wildlife


Irwin with crocodiles
Australian naturalist and television personality Steve Irwin has been killed by a stingray during a diving expedition off the Australian coast.
Mr Irwin, 44, died after being struck in the chest by the stingray's barb while he was filming a documentary in Queensland's Great Barrier Reef.

Paramedics from Cairns rushed to the scene but were unable to save him.

Mr Irwin was known for his television show The Crocodile Hunter and his work with native Australian wildlife.

Police in Queensland confirmed the environmentalist's death and said his family had been notified. Mr Irwin was married with two young children.

Mr Irwin's manager John Stainton told the BBC the stingray's barb had pierced the personality's heart.

"He came over the top of a stingray and a barb, the stingray's barb went up and put a hole into his heart," he said.

"We got him back within a couple of minutes to Croc 1, which is Steve's research vessel, and by 12 o'clock when the emergency crew arrived they pronounced him dead."

The incident happened at Batt Reef, off Port Douglas.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard said he had known Mr Irwin well, and that the country had lost a "wonderful and colourful son".

"I am quite shocked and distressed at Steve Irwin's sudden untimely and freakish death", he said.

"It's a huge loss to Australia - he was a wonderful character, he was a passionate environmentalist, he brought entertainment and excitement to millions of people."

The stingray is a flat, triangular-shaped fish, commonly found in tropical waters.

What happened to Steve Irwin is like being stabbed in the heart

It gets its name from the razor-sharp barb at the end of its tail, coated in toxic venom, which the animal uses to defend itself with when it feels threatened.

Attacks on humans are a rarity - only one other person is known to have died in Australia from a stingray attack, at St Kilda, Melbourne in 1945.

"Stingrays only sting in defence, they're not aggressive animals so the animal must have felt threatened. It didn't sting out of aggression, it stung out of fear," Dr Bryan Fry, Deputy Director of the Australian Venom Research Unit at the University of Melbourne said.

Baby stunt

Experts say that while painful, stingray venom is rarely lethal and it would have been the wound caused by the barb itself, which could measure up to 20cm long, which proved fatal.

"What happened to Steve Irwin is like being stabbed in the heart. It has little to do with the venom and all to do with the trauma caused by the barb of the stingray," Dr Geoff Isbister, a clinical toxicologist at the Mater Hospital in Newcastle, Australia, said.

Mr Irwin had built up what was a small reptile park in Queensland into what is now Australia Zoo, a major centre for Australian wildlife.

He was famous for handling dangerous creatures such as crocodiles, snakes and spiders, and his documentaries on his work with crocodiles drew a worldwide audience.

But he also courted controversy with a series of stunts.

He sparked outrage across Australia after cradling his one-month-old son a metre away from the reptile during a show at Australia Zoo.

An investigation was launched into whether Mr Irwin and his team interacted too closely with penguins and whales while filming in the Antarctic, but no action was taken.

Foreign Minister Alexander Downer praised Mr Irwin for his work to promote Australia.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/5311298.stm

Ben
4th September 2006, 04:11 PM
That's terrible, he was great! But he thrived on getting closer to dangerous creatures than anyone else, and it looks like he overdid it this time...

Brian
4th September 2006, 04:25 PM
That's terrible, he was great! But he thrived on getting closer to dangerous creatures than anyone else, and it looks like he overdid it this time...

Great...now I gotta break the news to the kiddos. They loved him. RIP, Steve.

Edith
4th September 2006, 04:56 PM
And it was such a freakish accident - if the stingray's poisonous tail had hit him in the leg, he would still be alive! Tragic. I liked the guy, even though he should never have let his young children participate in his stunts.

Chiny
4th September 2006, 06:12 PM
That's terrible, he was great! But he thrived on getting closer to dangerous creatures than anyone else, and it looks like he overdid it this time...

I recall one TV prog where he was bitten by some horrendous snake - top few in the world's lethal snakes. Even himself looked worried as he was driven for an hour across rugged territory to a hospital where the antidote was ready, having been warned a few days before.

I must admit I watched the whole programme in appalled fascination.

So, hardly a surprise but still a loss. RIP.

--
Chiny

Edith
4th September 2006, 08:02 PM
Do the Spanish know Steve Irwin at all?

Marina
4th September 2006, 08:28 PM
Not me sorry.

Bolboreta
4th September 2006, 09:07 PM
I did (although I didn't remember his name) but only because I watched his show while I was in the States. I don't think it aired here, but I can't say for sure.

Edith
4th September 2006, 10:09 PM
In Holland, Steve Irwin's programs were aired on Animal Planet:


http://animal.discovery.com/



http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2006/09/04/gallery/irwin_zoom.jpg

Brian
4th September 2006, 11:42 PM
What always amazed me was his childlike wonder concerning animals. It really is a terrible loss. :(

Netsirksmada
5th September 2006, 12:47 AM
Poor guy. I found out last night. I feel terrible for his wife and two kids =( Hopefully she has found out now...

Edith
5th September 2006, 10:38 PM
What always amazed me was his childlike wonder concerning animals. It really is a terrible loss. :(

Yeah, I feel sad about it too. Even though I think his shows were partly fake, I liked his zany sense of humor, like when he kissed one of those big Australian lizards. 'Hey, you're a cutie!'

I guess you would call this ingenuo in Spanish.

http://www.nu.nl/img.db/818542+s(120!x120!) <--- 'Isn't she cute?' LOLOLOL... priceless

Alan
5th September 2006, 11:21 PM
Am I the only one to think he had it coming? This video sums it up - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fzi_r0Ry_bU

Don't get me wrong, I don't wish death on anyone, but if you choose this kind of life then you have to take your chances. Also, I was appalled when he waved his kid above an alligator. You want to risk your life, do it - it's your decision. Your child on the other hand has not consented.

I realise that this is an extreme opinion and I don't want to offend anyone:) I am sorry for his family and am certainly not any happier with his death.

Edith
5th September 2006, 11:31 PM
I think you are being a bit harsh on Steve Irwin. Of course I agree he should never have involved his young kid in this - no argument about that. He had a habit of taking unnecessary risks, perhaps because he had ADHD - he was just unstoppable. Perhaps his wife Terry should have been more watchful.

But the fact that he has been killed by a mere stingray (and not by a saltwater croc, a sea snake or a great white shark) is truly a freak accident. Stingrays hardly ever attack people and if they do, chances that you will get stung in your heart by one of them are not very likely. This could have happened to any tourist out snorkeling or diving in tropical waters. I have snorkeled in the Red Sea. Once I almost stepped on a stingray in knee-deep water!

Alan
5th September 2006, 11:50 PM
Any poker player knows that you can take risks and they can pay off. You can protect yourself by learning how to improve your chances. But if you keep taking chances you will eventually be eliminated.

I re-read my previous post and didn't realise how harsh it sounded! My apologies - I enjoyed his programmes and do feel for the guy and his family. Yes, the stingray accident was a bit ironic considering the usual critters he tackles.

Sorry :)

ValenciaSon
5th September 2006, 11:53 PM
I guess he's off the Discovery channel and on the History channel. Sorry gallows humor helps me to compensate.

Edith
6th September 2006, 12:12 AM
Yes, the stingray accident was a bit ironic considering the usual critters he tackles.

Sorry :)

No worries mate! Crikey, am I sleepy and ready to go off to bed! :)

richardksa
6th September 2006, 06:12 AM
I broke the sad news to two of my Auistralian colleagues. Both said he was a "great bloke", but that they were not a bit surprised. As one of them said, "Something eventually had to get him".

gary
7th September 2006, 12:08 AM
I broke the sad news to two of my Auistralian colleagues. Both said he was a "great bloke", but that they were not a bit surprised. As one of them said, "Something eventually had to get him".


Yup

And Jim Fix the jogging guru died jogging and Dr Atkins died of a heart attack, whatever you do has the potential to get you, but at least they bought it doing what they believed in.

Marbella
12th September 2006, 02:04 PM
Is it possible for the world to get any weirder :confused:

"Irwin fans in revenge attacks" (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/5338118.stm)

cubix
13th September 2006, 03:43 AM
I consider myself an environmentalist, and Steve Irwin was a amazing man. Not because he was funny, which he was, but because of his ability to make wildlife interesting to normal people. Irwin was a conservationist, because he unlike many others could explain why it was important to preserve something.


Most of the time when you think of naturalist, you think of a stuffy classroom watching sliders and such. Well Irwin was out of the box, and his impact will be felt for decades to come..

Edith
13th September 2006, 03:37 PM
Is it possible for the world to get any weirder :confused:

"Irwin fans in revenge attacks" (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/5338118.stm)

Yes, I've heard about that too. What a bunch of cretins! I'm sure this is not what Steve Irwin would have wanted to happen.

felipe
25th January 2007, 02:34 AM
Now that Steve's death is respectfully distant, here is some slightly dark but inoffensive humour that has arisen since. Australian comedian Adam Hills was in Ireland when Irwin died. Recognising him as an Aussie a local came up to Hills and said,"Hey, I'm so sorry to hear about your man, dying on the job like that". Hills had not heard about Steve's death and wondered to himself, "Did Shane Warne die while sending a text message?".

ooroo, felipe