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Using Elephants as Bulldozers to Preserve Wildlife Sanctuaries (18 photos)

On Monday, Indian police and forestry officials began carrying out a series of forced evictions of illegally-built houses inside the 30-square-mile Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary in northeastern India, a protected habitat for wild elephants. Hundreds of structures were demolished by a few construction vehicles and about a dozen elephants, which were able to navigate some of the steeper and narrower trails. The people being evicted protested, some hurling rocks, but in the end, several hundred families were driven out. Increased encroachment on elephant habitat has been driving growing numbers of human-elephant encounters, which often end badly for the wild animals. Indian authorities have used elephants for demolition duty several times in recent years, including in 2016, when they removed 300 encroaching houses from the Kaziranga National Park rhino sanctuary.

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An elephant is used to demolish a house during an eviction drive inside the Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary on the outskirts of Gauhati, Assam, India, on November 27, 2017. (Anupam Nath / AP)
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https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2017/11/using-elephants-as-bulldozers-to-preserve-wildlife-sanctuaries/547049/