MAN AND TIGER: THE BRUTAL ENCOUNTER
As long as human population densities remained low, and the technological capability to extirpate prey species or hunt tigers was primitive, tigers were saved over much of their range. Their ecological adaptability and high reproductive potential ensured their survival.
The picture began to change with the colonial penetration of Asia in 18th and 19th centuries, when FIRE-ARMS (get that Walter?) teamed up with the traditional hunting skills, enabling the colonials, kings and commoners to launch a war of attrition on tigers
http://sierraactivist.org/tigers/karanth.html#eight
Tigers have killed more humans than any other big cat (<=====how 'bout that Walter???? ) and are one of the few creatures to hunt humana as prey.
http://www.szgdocent.org/cats/a-tiger.htm
The most notorious man-eaters are the 500 or so Bengal tigers in the Sunderbans Reserve, a mangrove forest in India. Each year, tigers kill about 50 people who enter the reserve to fish or collect wood; totalling 1,500 people over the last 30 years.
http://www.szgdocent.org/cats/a-tiger2.htm
During the Second World War, tigers in Burma got an appetite for human flesh by feeding on the corpses left behind after fighting, or from dead prisoners of war.
In the past 20 years, more than 800 people have been reported to have been killed by tigers in the Sundarbans mangrove on the borders of India and Bangladesh. Most of these deaths could have been avoided. In the Bangladesh Sundarbans more than 100 were killed from 1989 to 1991 (Heavy Death Toll to Tigers in Bangladesh. Cat News 16, 1992, p.6). Understandably these tragedies create serious problems for the conservation of these animals.
About 8,000 people have permits to enter the Sundarbans Tiger Reserve to collect wood and honey and to go fishing. Sufficient prey seems to exist but tigers still prey on humans. They swim out to boats to seize fishermen.
http://www.catsurvivaltrust.org/tiger.htm
Walter, thats a lot closer than your brainstem seems to be attacked to your skull zeN||