That was not the only sighting in Illinois. A couple of
weeks later on November 2, in Plano, Illinois, two separate groups of witnesses
reported seeing a kangaroo almost at the exact time. Within another couple of
weeks, sightings have occurred in Lansing, Illinois, and Carmel, Indiana.
Then on November 15, back in Chicago, a kangaroo was seen in
a vacant lot. The witness said it was 5-feet tall and “black all over, except
for the stomach and face, which were brown.” The last known sighting took place
on November 25 in Sheridan, Indiana, when a farmer, Donald Johnson, spotted a
kangaroo on a deserted rural road. Johnson stated. “It was running on all four
feet down the middle of the road.” When it noticed Johnson, it leaped over a
barbwire fence and into the field.
In Wisconsin, 1978, a photograph was taken of a kangaroo.
The picture was admittedly not very good, but clear enough to make out the
creature. The kangaroo was first spotted in Waukesha on April 5, 1978. On April
24, there were other sightings at Pewaukee Township, Brookfield Township, and
around Waukesha. Near Menomeonee Falls, two men had taken two pictures of a
kangaroo and it was said that this creature could possibly have been an escape
from a private animal collections or zoo, living wild.
Out-of-place animals, such as kangaroos, are rarely captured
and they seem to disappear as mysteriously as they appear. It seems only few
citizens see them and it is usually from a distance. However, in May of 1979, a
kangaroo seen in Nashua, New Hampshire was caught and found to be a wallaby (an
Australian marsupial similar to a kangaroo, but smaller) that had escaped from
a carnival that had recently left town.
Other sightings of
kangaroos, outside of their habitat, were also seen in New Brunswick, Nova
Scotia and Ontario, Canada; around Morange-Silverange in France, and on the
northern border of Hungary. How did it happen? It’s not known yet.
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