An inquisitive raccoon fiddled with electricity equipment in Toronto and cut power for thousands late on Thursday, knocking out traffic lights in Canada's largest city and trapping some people in elevators.
Crews investigating the outage determined that the nocturnal mammal made contact with equipment at a downtown Toronto station, Utility Hydro One said on social media.
A spokesperson for Hydro One said the raccoon did not survive the contact.
According to think-tank Electricity Canada, squirrels are by far the most common culprit when it comes to animal-related outages, followed by raccoons and birds.
The power outage on Thursday hit areas about 2 km from the CN Tower landmark and left about 7,000 people in the dark for nearly three hours.
The city's fire department said it had to respond to "a higher number of elevator rescues" due to power cuts.

164 confirmed dead after two major earthquakes strike Venezuela
Europeans told to protect themselves as deadly heatwave takes its toll
Trump asks Congress for more funds to fight Iran, defying rebuke on war powers
Magnitude 6.9 quake strikes Japan's northeast, no tsunami warning
US, Iran at odds on nuclear inspections, frozen assets in deal to end war
