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The Tiger of Mundachipallam was a male Bengal tiger, which in the 1950s killed seven people in the vicinity of the village of Pennagram, four miles (6 km) from the Hogenakkal Falls in Dharmapuri district of Tamil Nadu. Unlike the Segur man-eater, the Mundachipallam tiger had no known infirmities preventing him from hunting his natural prey.
As a hunter, he tracked down man-eating tigers and leopards. His kills include the Sloth bear of Mysore, the Leopard of Gummalapur, the Rogue Elephant of Panapatti, the Leopard of the Yellagiri Hills, the Tigress of Jowlagiri, the Tiger of Segur and the Tiger of Mundachipallam.
Gaver Tigers: 10 India Wolf of Cusago: 9 Italy [107] Tiger of Mundachipallam: 7 South India Sankebetsu bear: 7 Japan Tigress of Moradabad: 7 India [108] Mfuwe man eating lion: 6 Zambia Crocodile of Bang Mood 6 Thailand Kanda Man Eater: 5 India Tiger of Segur: 5 India Wolf of Soissons: 4 France New Jersey Shark: 4 North New Jersey Thak man-eater ...
Tiger attacks in the Sundarbans, in India and Bangladesh are estimated to kill from 0-50 (mean of 22.7 between 1947 and 1983) people per year. [1] The Sundarbans is home to over 100 [2] Bengal tigers, [3] one of the largest single populations of tigers in one area. Before modern times, Sundarbans tigers were said to "regularly kill fifty or ...
As of 2011 India census, [2] Pennagaram had a population of 18,100. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Pennagaram has an average literacy rate of 60%, higher than the national average of 59.5%: male literacy is 67%, and female literacy is 52%.
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Request received to merge articles: Tiger of Mundachipallam and Tiger of Segur into Tiger attack; dated November 2015.Rationale: Merge three articles on man-eater animals. . All three articles rely on a single source - a book by the hunter Kenneth Anderson who killed the animals hims