Does Sheep Murmuration Explain England's 19th Century Sheep Panic? - podcast episode cover

Does Sheep Murmuration Explain England's 19th Century Sheep Panic?

Feb 15, 202422 min
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Episode description

Mother Nature, in all her brilliance, has birthed some fascinating phenomena. Take the magical skies of the Aurora Borealis in Iceland for example, or the bioluminescent Maldives shores where the ocean lights up like neon blue fairy lights. 

 

Here in Australia, we have Lake Hillier, where the water is the colour of a strawberry milkshake. In England of course, they have the synchronised sheep panic at 8pm. Wait… what? 

 

Although one of the lesser known phenomena (you might even say “un-herd” of), unexplained sheep panic caused quite a stir in Oxfordshire England in the late 19th century. On November 3, 1888, tens of thousands of sheep in a 200 square mile radius in Oxfordshire suddenly went bonkers at 8pm. It was as if some unseen terror had gripped them all simultaneously. Can you hear the X-files theme music playing?

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Does Sheep Murmuration Explain England's 19th Century Sheep Panic? | A Little Bit Of Science podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast