The ‘Aflockalypse’: Google Map Traces Mass Animal Deaths
It's a map that believers in biblical plagues and the "end times" might well shudder at.
Many of the recent reports of mass animal deaths worldwide have been compiled by an anonymous person into one big, unsettling Google Map.
The atlas of animal annihilation has pins placed at the sites of die-offs and offers links to news stories chronicling a particular "aflockalypse." These have included the puzzling plummet of thousands of red-winged blackbirds from the sky in Louisiana and Arkansas, heaps of crabs littering England's beaches, and loads of fish washing up in countries such as the Philippines.
However ominous all these critter deaths might be, scientists have assured the public that the events are not linked. It appears, rather, that the widely reported blackbird story set off a chain of media reports of other similar mysterious massacres around the globe.
In other words, although the cause of many die-offs is unknown — everything from a storm to fireworks has been suspected in the case of the departed blackbirds — there is no need to start stockpiling canned goods or making burnt offerings.
• Bad Directions from Google Maps Lead to Lawsuit • Cool Google Maps Mashups, From the Practical to the Bizarre • 10 Profound Innovations Ahead
Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter now
Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.