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Zoo expert reveals 3 reasons why Chicago's ‘rat hole' might not be a rat

The rat-shaped imprint in a Roscoe Village sidewalk has become not just a local attraction, but one now known around the country. The fandom has even led many to bring flowers and money as offerings to the hole

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Chicago's now-viral "rat hole" has taken over the internet and gained national attention, but it appears the name might not be as fitting as it seemed.

The rat-shaped imprint in a Roscoe Village sidewalk has become not just a local attraction, but one now known around the country. The fandom has even led many to bring flowers and money as offerings to the hole.

But according to Lincoln Park Zoo's Dr. Seth Magle, the director of the Urban Wildlife Institute, the imprint may not be from a rat at all, as some residents suspected.

In what he jokingly referred to as the "most important scientific finding of maybe our lifetimes," Magle acknowledged the hype around the rat has take over the conversation in Chicago.

"We've been talking about almost nothing else," he told NBC Chicago in an interview.

According to Magle, the length of the hole "could be basically a big rat or a small squirrel," but there are some other factors that have him believing it is not in fact a rat.

"The first is when we think about what kind of animal could fall from a height and land on wet concrete. Much more likely to be a squirrel with all the time they spend in branches," he said. "We think of them as really balletic and graceful and they are. But I have seen them actually like just take a header straight out of a tree. So they, they will do that."

How would a rat have made an imprint in wet concrete with no additional marks to indicate how it got there?

"The only way to explain it being a rat is maybe if it's being carried by a hawk or something and drop, you have to make up a really complicated story to make that work," Magle said.

But that's not all.

"The second reason I think it's a squirrel is that when we think about when concrete is usually wet, it's probably gonna be during the day," Magle said. "It's probably not gonna be wet in the middle of the night. Rats are active at night."

Magle said the third factor is that some longtime residents have previously reported the imprint was actually from a squirrel.

According to some residents who live near the now-iconic street sensation, the imprint has actually been there for years and only recently gained national attention.

The new tourist attraction in the city, located in the 1900 block of West Roscoe Street in Roscoe Village, rose to fame in a viral social media post.

The post generated millions of views and quickly went viral.

Cindy Nelson, who has lived across the street from the imprint for over 20 years, told the Chicago Sun-Times, “I don’t want to burst anyone’s bubble or upset anybody, but it’s a squirrel."

Nelson told NBC Chicago a tree used to be located near the spot where the imprint is located.

"So there was a huge tree there originally and the people that lived here when the tree was here, you know, we kind of all just believe that it fell out of the tree," she said. "And then I just personally believe it was the squirrel that fell out of the tree. I don't know if a rat can run up a tree or a raccoon."

You might be asking, however, if it was a squirrel, what about its tail?

"I'm not totally sure whether the fur on a squirrel's tail would be heavy enough to imprint itself in concrete," Magle said. "It may have to do with how it landed. It may have to do with something else. But, you know, this is something we often see. Like, for example, it took them a long time to figure out that, like, certain animals in the fossil record had fur because fur doesn't really leave an impression necessarily the way a more dense part of a body, like a bone or muscles, would."

But that still leaves the question of how did it get away with no other prints left in the concrete? Did the animal survive?

"Squirrels are tough, but the reason that I think probably not is if it had, I would expect we would see other paw prints and stuff still in the concrete when it was sort of dragging itself off," Magle said.

There is one scenario, however, in which a happy ending could be conceivable.

"At a minimum, it probably laid there long enough to leave that impression, the rest of [the concret] dried out," he said. "Sometimes animals, we see that sometimes with birds that hit windows, sometimes they seem like they're dead but they're stunned and they can lay there for hours before they get up and fly away. So sometimes that does happen."

Whatever it is, residents are surprised at the sudden attention -- and just how big it's gotten, with tributes, a rush of visitors and more.

Magle says he loves seeing the viral nature of it all.

"I think what it reminds us is that, no matter how deep in the city you live, we all have this deep tie, this need to be connected to nature and other species - even if it's in kind of a weird way, like look at this rat hole in the sidewalk," he said.


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