Earth Changes
The whale was discovered Thursday, October 20th on Little Florida beach just west of Holly beach in Cameron Parish.
Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries agents say the 21-foot animal is believed to be a sperm whale.
An examination of the whale is underway to determine what happened.
It was the second such incident in a month.
"He was badly injured by the rogue elephant and succumbed to injuries at the Talek Health Centre," a police officer said.
The death of the Belgian man on Monday in circumstances that remain unclear comes after an Italian man was trampled in the Tsavo National Park, southeast Kenya, while trying to take a photograph of an elephant.
Kenyan daily The Standard reported that in a separate incident on Tuesday, a Kenyan secondary school student had been killed by an elephant while on the way to school.
The Kenya Wildlife Service warned that a fierce drought was pushing wildlife further from their traditional habitats in search of food and water.
Source: AFP

Hail storm in Bloemfontein on 20 October, 2016 around Langenhovenpark.
A heavy storm passed through Bloemfontein last night with hail wreaking havoc in the drought stricken area.
The hail storm caused damaged to some cars.
The thick layer of hail, which could almost be mistaken for snow, covered the streets of Bloemfontein.
People on Twitter, though, have reacted with relief and have expressed how happy they are to receiving the rain:
The case — if the vicious marine animal was indeed a Lontra canadensis (North American river otter), and Elizabeth Elbourne is absolutely convinced it was — joins only 44 reports of otter attacks published worldwide since 1875.
The alarming encounter occurred last August, after Elbourne told her daughter she was going for a "quick dip" in the lake at their rental cottage in the Laurentians.
Suddenly, while doing the front crawl, the woman felt something sharp hit her leg. "So I stopped, and saw this otter's head sticking of the water."
Comment: See also these other reports from recent years: 9 year old boy recovering from otter attack near Kalispell, Montana
Minneapolis girl attacked and chased by otter in Wisconsin lake
Boy and grandmother attacked and injured by river otter on Pilchuck River, Washington
River otter attacks woman swimmer in British Columbia lake
Girl, 13, attacked by otter in Kalama River, Washington
Woman recovering after 'vicious' OTTER attack in West Yellowstone, Montana
Between 2010 and 2015 the number of attacks by dogs here, where injury has been caused, has gone up by 278.
The figures also show that attacks on children under the age of 18 has almost doubled.
In the last 3 months alone, there have been two fatal dog attacks on children here in Essex. In August this year, 3 year old Dexter Neal was mauled to death in a garden in Halstead and then last Thursday, 4 month old Archie Darby died after being attacked by a dog at his aunt's house in Colchester.
And the trend shows no evidence of slowing down. This year alone, between January and August, there's already been 397 dog attacks in Essex.

Methane gas bubbling up out of cold seeps on the Atlantic Ocean floor offshore Virginia.
"It's like bottles of champagne all along the seafloor," said Jesse Ausubel, an organiser for the 2016 National Ocean Exploration Forum, where the gaseous discovery, along with other intriguing finds from recent deep ocean surveys, is being presented this week.
For years, scientists have been aware that methane, an odourless, colourless gas produced naturally during microbial digestion (and more famously, by farting cows) bubbles up from the seafloor where the conditions are right. Recent scientific surveys have discovered hundreds of methane seeps along the Atlantic continental margin, and it's believed there could be thousands more across the world.
Understanding these seeps — where and when they occur, and what controls their activity — is a hot topic in Earth science research today, given that methane is a potent greenhouse gas. In fact, many scientists worry that by warming the oceans, climate change is speeding up the very processes that produce methane, in addition to melting icy methane hydrates that accumulate on the seafloor. In theory, this could lead to an enormous release of heat-trapping gases to the atmosphere.
She added: "On Thursday afternoon, a dead 40ft Finn whale was washed up on Holkham Beach, part of Holkham National Nature Reserve, on the north Norfolk coast.
"Wardens from the reserve have reported the whale to the Cetacean Strandings Investigation Programme (CSIP) who hope to carry out a post-mortem to establish cause of death.
"Plans are in place to remove the whale from the beach. Holkham Beach remains open but we advise the public not to venture close to the carcass and to keep dogs on leads."
Madelene Stopforth, (52), of Margate was walking along the beach with her husband when they found across the carcass wedged up between the rocks, about half a kilometre south of Southbroom's main beach.
She described the sight as very gory, as the whale's flesh was peeling off it's massive body.
"The mammal's backbone was sticking out and it's intestines, which were full of gas and looked bubbly, were floating in the water."

A woman stands outside her house which was damaged by a fallen tree during Typhoon Haima, in Bangui, Ilocos Norte in northern Philippines, October 20, 2016.
Super Typhoon Haima struck late on Wednesday night with winds similar to those of catastrophic Haiyan in 2013, which was then the strongest storm to strike the disaster-prone Southeast Asian archipelago and claimed more than 7,350 lives.
Haima then roared across mountain and farming communities of the northern regions of the main island of Luzon overnight, causing widespread destruction and killing at least eight people, authorities said.
"We were frightened because of the strong winds. There was no power, no help coming," Jovy Dalupan, 20, told AFP as she sheltered at nightfall on the side of a highway in San Pablo, a badly damaged town of 20,000 people in Isabela province.
Dalupan, her two young daughters and husband, were forced to flee to the highway along with their neighbours during the height of the storm when their shanty homes, made of plywood, were ripped apart.
Comment: Haima is now approaching Hong Kong and is the third severe typhoon to hit the city in October - the last time that happened in that month was in 1989.












Comment: See also: Tourist trampled to death by elephant after provoking it by moving too near to takes pictures in Kenya