Yellowstone bison gores Pennsylvania woman, 71, in second attack this week,
“The woman and her daughter inadvertently approached the bison as they were returning to their vehicle at the trailhead, causing the bull bison to charge,” the Park Service said on Thursday.
The woman suffered “non-life-threatening injuries” and was taken to West Park Hospital in Cody, Wyo.
It’s unclear exactly how close the woman and her daughter were when the bison charged. The park, which lies mostly in Wyoming, requires visitors to stay more than 25 yards from bison.
“Wildlife in Yellowstone National Park are wild and can be dangerous when approached,” the Park Service said, repeating the same warning it had put out just two days before.
The incident is the latest in a series in which bison have gored visitors who did not keep the appropriate distance.
Earlier in the week, a 34-year-old man from Colorado Springs was gored by a bison at the Old Faithful geyser. The man was walking with his family on a boardwalk near Giant Geyser on Monday when a bull bison charged the group, according to a news release.
“Family members did not leave the area, and the bull bison continued to charge and gored the male,” the Park Service said.
The man suffered an arm injury and was taken to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center, the hospital for Yellowstone. The Park Service said the Monday incident involved a visitor who was “too close to the animal.”
Before those two incidents, a 25-year-old woman from Grove City, Ohio, was gored by a bison and thrown 10 feet into the air on Memorial Day after she also got too close to the animal. While on a boardwalk at Black Sand Basin in late May, the woman approached within 10 feet of the animal, park officials said. Two other people also were within 25 yards of the bison, the Park Service said in a news release.
When the woman approached the bison at the boardwalk west of Old Faithful, the animal charged her.
“Consequently, the bison gored the woman and tossed her 10 feet into the air,” the Park Service said at the time.
The woman suffered a puncture wound and other injuries and was taken to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center.
As the largest mammals in North America, bison have injured more people at Yellowstone than any other animal, according to the Park Service. They are unpredictable and enormously strong. Although they can weigh as much as 1 ton and stand about 6 feet at the shoulder, bison can run up to 35 mph, which is “three times faster than humans,” the Park Service says. They can also jump up to six feet vertically “and can quickly pivot to combat predators,” according to the National Wildlife…
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