Cryptozoology is a legitimate scientific field worthy of the same level of
Transcription
Cryptozoology is a legitimate scientific field worthy of the same level of
1 Cryptozoology is a legitimate scientific field worthy of the same level of attention and respect that any other science is allotted. By Danny B Stewart An introduction to Cryptozoology There are a small number of individuals who commit a considerable amount of their time, energy, and most cases own money perusing the possibility that strange, undiscovered and assumed extinct animals are hiding in the presumably great unknown. Some of these individuals claim to be cryptozoologists, however there is no school that offers any course, nor is there a degree through which one can obtain the official title of cryptozoologist. Most of those involved in this “unofficial” science are laypersons, people with a fascination for the unknown, or fantastic, individuals who spend their spare-time as self-proclaimed “professionals,” private investigators, who gather every bit of information on a specific creature, or creatures. Cryptozoology also attracts educated and open-minded scientists, professionals who delve into the possibilities that cryptozoology presents approaching it with an opened-minded, yet pragmatic approach. Cryptozoology is “the science of hidden animals,” animals whose existence known by the local populations sufficiently well that we indirectly known of their existence and certain aspects of their behavior and appearance. Perhaps a better term is animals “undescribed by science.”1 In this paper I will show with example and historical precedent, through evidence, and the discovery of creatures that at one point were thought to be extinct, or myths, but were eventually proven to exist. I will attempt to prove that cryptozoology is a legitimate scientific field worthy of the same level of attention and respect that any other science is allotted. There is a misconception that cryptozoology is an arcane or occult “science,”2 that it is in the business of “hunting monsters”. It is not! It is this misconception that paints a 2 negative portrait of cryptozoology and is what the many naysayers use to discredit it.3 Monsters do not exist; animals we know nothing about (yet) do exist. The first zoologist to fully devote his professional life exclusively to this field was Bernard Heuvelmans. Heuvelmans is called “the father of cryptozoology” with this labeling Heuvelmans was quick to point out that there were several “forefathers.” In the late 1950s Bernard Heuvelmans (1916-2001) who had a Ph. D. in “zoological sciences”4 coined the term “cryptozoology” using the Greek roots kryptos (hidden), zoon (animal), and logos (discourse), which means, “the science of hidden animals.”5 These are animals! Not monsters! A better description would be “unknowns,”6 a more respectable term for these “unknowns” is “cryptids.” The word cryptid was coined in 1983 by John E Wall.7 It could be argued that cryptozoology, not in name, but in form, (an indirect practice of it if you will, through “old-wives-tales” “ancient camp-fire-stories,” etc.) has existed throughout history in one form or another. There are a plethora of “monster” tales from the worlds ancient past, Grecian myths, the various wild-men of the world’s forests, and the Sirrush of Ishtar Gate are good examples. Introducing the cryptid When we consider a cryptid what are we talking about or looking for? 1: Extant and known living species which are unrecognized as living in a particular area. 2: Known and living species whose form, color, size, is extraordinary for that species, giant anacondas, spotted lions. 3: Known species thought to be extinct within historical times. 4: Presumably extinct species, not in fossil form, known only from limited evidence, feathers, skin, bones, but without a complete specimen. 3 5: New species known by anecdotal evidence while no organic evidence exists. 6: Representatives of fossil forms, presumed extinct during geological times which may have survived into historical or modern times. 7: New species know only to indigenous or aboriginal peoples, or discovered entirely by accident.8 Cryptids vary in size, they can be small like the one to two foot long Tzuchinoko of Japan, a snakelike creature said to resemble a Toblerone chocolate bar with a flat undersurface and a very prominent dorsal ridge.9 This creature has a pair of small knobs, or horns just above its eyes, it may be a form of pit viper, Agkistrodon halys, or new species10. Tzuchinoko 11 A very distinctive North American cryptid, commonly called a water “monster” and described as a dinosaur is Florida’s Pinky of the St. Johns River.12 Its descriptions vary, one of the least likely being a small bipedal dinosaur. On May 10th 1975 an outboard motorboat transporting five people on the river claimed to have encountered Pinky. A pink colored head and neck surfaced twenty feet away from their boat.13 It had a head as large as a humans and a short pair of snail-like knobs on the top of its head, large slanted eyes, a down-turned mouth, gill like flaps hanging from the side of its head, a serrated neck, and a ribbed body, and was the “color of broiled shrimp.”14 The lore of this creature 4 is well known to fisherman in the area, although it is not a dinosaur.15 It is likely an as yet identified species of Giant Hell Bender salamander, as there are several known species of giant salamander in the world. North American is home to at least one version, so it isn’t too outlandish to say that Florida is perhaps home to a brightly colored slightly larger version.16 Hellbender Salamander 17 A brief history of Cryptozoology From the 15th century up till the late 18th century, there was no need for cryptozoology.18 “Naturalists” of the time were curious and eager to discover anything new. They paid close attention to even the vaguest of animal-rumors, practicing an early form of cryptozoology.19 These naturalists were consumed with the “cryptozoological spirit,” eager to explore and discover all that was new and wonderful about the world around them.20 The Renaissance zoologist never hesitated placing any and every animal proven or otherwise, in their zoological encyclopedias of the 16th and 17th centuries, even the most fanciful creatures such as the dragon, unicorn, and phoenix. Edward Woton (1492-1555), Conrad Gessner (1516-65), Guillaume Rondelet (1507-66), Pierre Belon (1517-64), etc. are a few of the naturalists who participated in this kind of eager and perhaps overly accepting behavior.21 Unfortunately this mentality created a disadvantage because these naturalists relied on the descriptions and drawings of lesser-known creatures that were 5 often “transmogrified” meaning, although many of the animals they depicted were based on actual living specimens, they were often imperfectly described, and misrepresented.22 Since a good number of these creatures were probably fictitious, they began to disappear from various works over time, some hundred years later naturalists began to take a what some consider a more level headed approach towards the natural sciences.23 Naturalists like Carl von Leclerc (1717-78) who attempted to systematize nature and George Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon (1707-88) who looked at the causes of diversity in nature, are good examples of this change of approach.24 Some unknowns remained in various literature though, Homo troglodytes, a nocturnal wild hairy man and the Microcosmus marinus, a large tentacled creature, a creature as large as an island could still be found in the Systema Naturae of Linnaeus.25 Comte de Buffon wrote that he believed there were tigers in Africa, as well as a hairy man-like creature known by natives as the Pongo, an “abominable woodsman” that supposedly kidnapped and raped native women. We now know this creature as the Gorilla, Gorilla gorilla.26 When sightings of “monsters”, Sea serpents, Mer-creatures, and the Kraken were reported in the 19th century, naturalists reacted with violent indignation at the “traveler’s tales” and the American sea serpents were deemed to be little more than nonsense by many.27 In 1812 Baron Georges Cuvier (1769-1832), “the father of Paleontology”28 made what has come to be known as “Cuvier’s rash dictum”29: “there is little hope of discovering new species of large quadrupeds.” 30 When it came to the topic of “cryptids” he flatly stated, I hope nobody will ever seriously look for them in nature; one could easily as well search for the animals of Daniel or for the beast of the Apocalypse.”31 It was the beginning of the 19th century and dogmatism, and authoritarianism spread-throughout 6 “science” under the guise of rationalism.32 What was accepted, rejected, or defined by “science” seemed to have been borrowed from some religious ideology.33 The opened minded individuals of the 19th century didn’t subscribe to the closedminded edicts of the time, they were more than willing to give at least some credit to the supposed “monster” tales that continued to circulate.34 The sea serpent was appearing in news papers and in scientific literature such as Benjamin Silliman’s (1776-1859) American Journal of Science and Arts from (1820-1835), (United States), and England’s Edward Newman (1801-76) and his Zoologists (1847-1876).35 Newman summarized what he saw as the proper attitude towards sea serpents, …the communications and quotations about ‘the sea serpent’ are well worthy of attentive perusal: it is impossible to suppose all the records bearing this title to be fabricated for the purpose of deception. A natural phenomenon of some kind has been witnessed: let us seek a satisfactory solution rather than terminate enquiry by shafts of ridicule …surely it is not requiring too much to solicit a suspension of judgment on the question of whether a monster may exist in the sea which does not adorn our collection.36 The early naturalists remained occupied with many “unknowns,” not just the “sea serpent.”37 Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859), the “father of physical geography” had doubts about the existence of a rumored large South American ape, but didn’t believe that that these accounts should be painted as fables: In treating them with disdain, the traces of discovery may often be lost, in natural philosophy as well as zoology…travelers who may hereafter visit the missions of the Orinoco will do well to follow up our researchers on the salvaje or 7 great devil of the woods; and examine whether it be some unknown species of bear, or some very rare monkey… which may have given rise to such singular tales.38 Some scientists began to suggest that prehistoric creatures and humans did exist together at some point in time, thus being the origins for a few, if not all of the tales of strange creatures.39 Colonel Charles Hamilton Smith (1776-1859) surmised that the legends of North American Indians suggested they may have witnessed living giant ground sloths and mastodons, he also supported the theory of existing unicorns and that they still survived in remote areas of Africa, which ultimately lead to the discovery of the northern white rhinoceros.40 The individuals with these theories were not interested in still-living-unknownanimals, so much as the survival of animals, which were only known from their remains, fossils, etc., into periods where they were not believed to have lived, opening the theory that ancient man may have encountered prehistoric creatures, before they became completely extinct.41 Edward Burnett Tylor (1832-1917) “the father of modern ethnology,” (now known as social anthropology)42, pointed-out that in leading up to modern-times, popular traditions had perhaps preserved the memories of certain prehistoric animals leading to stories being passed down through the various generations and lost chronologically as to blur when these encounters may have actually occurred.43 On this geologist Charles Gould wrote in 1886, in his book Mythical Monsters: I have…but little hesitation in gravely proposing to submit that many of the socalled mythical animals, which through long ages and in all nations have been the fertile subjects of fiction and fable, come legitimately within the scope of plain 8 matter-of-fact natural history, and that they may be considered not as the outcome of exuberant fancy, but as creatures which really once existed, and of which, unfortunately, only imperfect and inaccurate descriptions have filtered down to us, probably much refracted, through the mists of time.44 The idea of long dead creatures lingering in memory only, thus the catalyst of these unknown animal tales and beliefs is a legitimate, and perhaps accurate theory in some cases, but it in no way explains the current and more recent sightings, the odd sea and lake creatures, the many “encounters” with hairy-wild-men, etc. that were being, and still are, reported all around the world, not to mention evidence of their existence. During the last century only a select few suggested which zoological category still unknown animals should be placed.45 Some felt that sea serpents were enormous snakes, but when the first dinosaur fossils were unearthed and reconstructed, some of the naturalists immediately related the sea serpent with sea dwelling reptiles being reconstructed, such as the mososaur and plesiosaur, however this was just guesswork, they relied on the general descriptions of animals that had been sighted when coming to this theory.46 Reverend John George Wood (1827-1899) concluded that based on sightings and descriptions of their movement, and other behaviors, that the sea serpent “belongs to not to the saurians, but to a cetacean animal, which, if not an actual zeuglodon, has many affinities with that creature.” 47 Zoological unknowns sparked the curiosity of many individuals. These were individuals willing to venture into a realm generally frowned upon, by conservative science. Paleobiologists have long been bewildered by the disappearance of the dinosaurs and pre-sapiens (hominids), there is still debate on what exactly caused the disappearance of 9 the dinosaurs. There is no consensus among scientist as to why they are gone.48 Why did reptiles such as lizards, crocodiles, snakes, turtles, manage to survive to present day, yet dinosaurs that came in all different sizes and were distributed all over the world didn’t?49 This question can be directed towards chimpanzees, orangutans, gibbons, and gorillas that have survived, but why other primitive hominids did not. The survival of any of these creatures would solve a problem, we know they existed, but not why they ceased to. The Sciences and Cryptozoology Cryptozoology claims to follow established “scientific” principles, and attempts to confront questions rarely asked in the mainstream zoological community.50 In this vein there are strong parallels between cryptozoology and paleontology.51 Paleontology studies and searches for animals lost in a “time dimension,” cryptozoology does the same for animals lost in a “space dimension.”52 Both disciplines are based on the exception: paleontology on fossilization, a phenomenon that only occurs under the right environmental circumstances while cryptozoology focuses on fortunate visual observations of elusive, or well camouflaged animals.53 Both depend on reconstructions via interpolation, extrapolation, and conjecture based upon incomplete data: fossil fragments, or foot prints with paleontology and with cryptozoology, tufts of hair, feces, blood, photos, etc.54 The reconstructions and hypotheses of cryptozoology, in regards to actual living animals, closely resemble those that paleontology has based its reconstruction of prehistoric fauna.55 The chirotherium is an example of how they mirror each other in various ways. The chirotherium is a fossil genus found in England, France, Italy, Germany, and the United States and is known only by its tracks.56 It seems a perfectly 10 legitimate action to give a scientific name to a fossil known only by its foot prints, yet at the same time scientists believe it is preposterous and premature to scientifically describe the Himalayan Yeti, an unidentifiable creature, known not only by its tracks, but by eyewitness accounts that relate its morphology and behavior.57 Paleontologists are aware of this situation and some argue against applying traditional Linnaean nomenclature to animals that are unidentifiable, particularly when dealing with discreet parts, or life stages unidentifiable in relation to the animal they belong.58 This can also be attributed to fossilized tracks that rarely can be aligned with the correct species, even when the full skeleton is present.59 The methods of paleontology have continued to develop since the beginnings of the science in the early 19th century and do open some doors when applying these methods to cryptozoology.60 With the creation of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature came the expulsion of animals not meeting the proper and necessary conditions for description, or acceptance protocol, creating a logic that a number of scientists follow, that since an animal cannot be scientifically named, it can not exist. This closed minded idea could be viewed as ignorance, especially when coming from “specialists” in zoology, though other scientists choose to remain patient and make no definitive decision in determining if something exists or not, until the day that a particular cryptid is proven to exist, or otherwise via a body or other definitive evidence, pro or con.61 Bernard Heuvelmans considers this mentality a “sterile suspension of activity,” an “excessive and unjust prudence that should be condemned!”62 In science’s quest for truth, it bases itself entirely on reason.63 It is reason that should be applied to cryptozoology. Heuvelman believes, and I follow suit, that science can 11 never reach an absolute, objective truth and that it subscribes to the most convenient and understandable description of the universe at its given time, and that we instead should seek all of the resources that the world of phenomena presents and treats it in a logical manner!64 Science is the systemized observation of, and experimentation with phenomena.65 It should be noted that discovery of truth and the systemizing of knowledge take time and each discipline uses different methods of discovering the truth, methods that are suited for their own particular purposes.66 Cryptozoological research utilizes eye-witness testimony, identification, tracks, footprints, reference files, photographs, surveillance, and laboratory analysis.67 These methods mirror those used in criminal investigations, this coincidence comes naturally.68 Science has three different courts of proof: 1: autopical proofs that can be seen, touched, smelled, or tasted 2: circumstantial proofs that depend on the coherence of pieces of evidence that either compete, complete, or collaborate with one-another 3: testimonial proofs, based on the testimonies of witnesses, descriptions, things or events.69 The sciences base themselves upon all forms of proof, the physical sciences rarely requires recourse to autopical proofs, the objects of their research are far beyond our sensory organs.70 Meaning we can only conceive structures and actions of the universe that cannot be conceived except through mathematical equations and celestial bodies through their luminous spectra.71 With the Earth sciences, once we go beyond the Earth’s crust, the composition and nature of its interior are only known through the study of 12 seismic shocks.72 Only the life sciences depend upon autopical proofs, with its members needing a specific specimen to ratify its existence.73 New facts and proposed discoveries are generally not fully accepted without at least some opposition from the scientific community, unless they fall nicely into certain perimeters, and are not radically new.74 When discoveries are truly novel they may take upwards to thirty years for acceptance, when a consensus is reached, eventual familiarity allows them to be reconciled. Evidential proofs play only a secondary role in this process.75 Only the obstinate accumulation and repetition of the new information and facts allow for them to bring about conviction. Routine, not reason and logic are often the determining factors.76 The history of scientific revolution is rich in content. Science like history is full of accidents and odd-juxtapositions of events.77 For those that wish to change a part of society or in this case science and the traditions therein, in particular those related to cryptozoology, must be able to master all aspects of the sciences that have some connection to the life sciences, or cooperate with various other experts in their own respective fields, zoology, biology, paleontology, archeology, microbiology; even mythology and folklore have a place at the table. A complex medium such as cryptozoology that contains surprises and unforeseen developments demands complex procedures, science doesn’t just rely on facts and conclusions drawn from facts, but from ideas, the interpretation of facts, conflicting interpretations, and mistakes.78 Is it possible to create a tradition held together by strict rules that are successful to some extent, but is it desirable to support such a tradition with the exclusion of everything else?79 Should we transfer the sole rights of investigation to tradition so that 13 any result acquired from other avenues is immediately ruled out?80 No, for two main reasons; 1: the world we want to explore is still largely unknown, especially when dealing with new and unknown animals81 and 2: we must keep our options open and not restrict ourselves in advance. Epistemological prescriptions may seem to work well when compared to other epistemological prescriptions, or with general principles, but not with unforeseen variables.82 Do we really know if these prescriptions are the best format to discover, not just a few isolated facts, but the deepest secrets of nature?83 The idea of a method that contains firm, unchanging, and absolutely binding principles that conducts the business of science meets a substantial difficulty when it is confronted with the results of historical research. We find that there isn’t a single rule grounded in epistemology that is not violated at some time.84 The history and philosophy of science is the realization of events such as Copernican Revolution, the invention of atomism in antiquity, to the rise of modern atomism. The emergence of wave theory occurred because someone decided not to be bound by certain methodological rules, or perhaps because they unwittingly broke them.85 Thus the same should be considered for zoology and the staunch rules that are supposed to supersede it. All must be bent at times if not broken, who is one to say that Lazarus taxa (described later in this paper) couldn’t eventually apply itself towards a dinosaur? Or that relic hominids are not intelligent enough to continue to evade modern man? Cryptozoology in Myth One of the staunchest, most damning and often made arguments against cryptozoology, and may be one of the unfortunate defining factors of cryptozoology that ultimately prevents legitimization in the eyes of “traditional” and “respected” science is 14 the “snare of mythification.”86 This is an objection raised by zoologists and folklorist alike, that these animals that are thought to be hidden are in fact unattainable because they are all products of the imagination. Granted, many of the reports and sightings of cryptids are typically full of fantastic and supernatural details, which are incredible and unbelievable, even to the most open-minded scientist.87 It is important to note that myth, from the Greek word mythos means narrative, story, or fable, depending on which author you read, and doesn’t come entirely from the delirium of disordered imagination.88 It has been argued that the definition of myth “must be both broad and loose, for myth operates universally and diversely.” “Even a loose definition does not include the current journalistic sense of falsehood.”89 It is because of a degraded usage that the word, “mythic” has become a synonym for the word “fictional.”90 In fact originally myth had the opposite meaning of “true story,” or “veridical narrative,” but this conception has only been the case in societies considered “primitive.”91 The study of myths show us that myths reflect primordial beliefs that are slowly developed or revealed, and with subjects ranging from Gods, the birth of the universe, stars, and people, to traditions that possibly date back to prehistory.92 The philosopher Leon Brunschvicg (1869-1944) stated that “primitives want to explain everything, whereas the civilized are willing to allow gaps.”93 The distinction between civilized and primitives or indigenous peoples has since been recognized as artificial, but whether we want to admit it or not, the unknown terrifies everybody and is the way that primitives deal with their fear through explanatory myths that seem naïve and extravagant to the civilized. It can be said that civilized and rational scientists deal with the unknown through hypothesis, which is in all reality also controversial and questionable.94 In both 15 of these cases it comes down to the elimination of lacunae of knowledge, via the use of imagination.95 The concept of unknown and hidden animals interpolate easily into a forced mythification and in what may be the case in many of the more fantastic descriptions, or miss descriptions of many cryptids may be simply to assimilate each creature into what Jung called an archetype, the choice of involving whichever mythical creature a witnessed creature resembles.96 Sometimes witnesses borrow from a mythical creature's attributes or exploits and apply them to a sighted unknown creature.97 An example of this is the mythologies involving the gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) before its official discovery. It was represented as a vicious beast that kidnapped and raped women, when in all reality it is a gentle and reserved creature.98 So once we discover the realities of the world’s unknown creatures, we will be able to fill the holes in our knowledge of them and be able to know and accept them for what they are: animals.99 Often we apply myths to animal, however jokingly we may accept these myths they still prevail. Such as the idea that a cats eyes glow in the dark and that they can see in the dark. So basically all animals known or otherwise are mythified to some extent.100 Myth is an important factor, but it is not the only one and the existence of a creature cannot be put into question based on myth and if someone feels uncertain about accepting the sighting of an unknown hairy hominid that has mythified by it’s observer as a kind of demon, they could perhaps move their doubt by digging deeper, analyzing the scenario and its content to pull apart myth from fact.101 16 Are there still animals left to encounter? Few zoologists today are willing to assert the unlikelihood of animals remaining to be documented.102 Still, many scientists view cryptozoology with suspicion because of cryptozoology’s willingness to consider the possibility of some extraordinary claims103 particularly the claims of odd creatures such as ape-men wondering North America or those described as prehistoric in nature (dinosaurs) in the various lakes throughout the world. The notion of species extinction has obscured the concept of species survival, according to Heuvelman extinction and species survival are condition sine qua non of biological evolution.104 Living and dying in nature are proportionately balanced that the variety of life and the number of species on Earth has gradually been on the increase for millions of years, not only because of the process of speciation, but also the survival of old forms.105 So with this in mind Heuvelman asks, “how do we know precisely what is extinct and what is extant?”106 Charles Darwin (1809-82) stated No fixed law seems to determine the length of time during which any single species or any single genus endures,” and “the utter extinction of a whole group of species has sometimes been a slow process, from the survival of a few descendents, lingering in protected and isolated situations.107 Russian Paleontologist L.S. Davitashvili has this to say on the topic: It is always necessary to remember the incompleteness of the geological record. The first appearance of a given species in the geological record and its disappearance from the latter can in no way be taken for the dates of its origin and final extinction. The real life span of species (or a group of species) is usually much longer than the period determined from the geological record. Consequently, the dating of the extinction of a form or a group is not as simple a matter as may appear from the frequent citing in the paleontological literature of extinction dates from various organisms.108 17 It is a matter of observation and empirical investigation as to whether a species is extinct or extant.109 If the skeleton of a certain animal is found and we only know the animal from its skeleton, it is automatically presumed extinct, yet nothing prevents this animal from popping up somewhere alive and well.110 This is known as the “Lazarus effect.”111 An example of this is the discovery of a species of rodent from the Diatomyidae and genus Cuscomys.112 An amazing example is the discovery of the coelacanth, which I will go into some detail in later on in this paper. The Lazarus effect has occurred a number of times and there is nothing unusual or unscientific in expecting further occurrences like this.113 Discovering the new animals Many sciences have their hidden objects. Astronomers search for hidden objects and celestial bodies in the vastness of space, many of which cannot be observed optically.114 Geologists search for minerals hidden within the Earth, paleontologist for fossils, and cryptozoologists search for hidden animals.115 Up to a certain point the exploration of botany is similar to that of zoology and the discovery of new organisms continues for both sciences today, with over 2,000 new plant species being discovered every year.116 Metasequoia glyptostroboides was first described by paleobotanists, later to be found alive.117 In the search for new plants botanists often depend on the testimony of native peoples who are familiar with their given areas, yet there is no cryptobotany. Why is this?118 It is because there can be wondrous plants hidden in the jungles of the world, but there are no plants actually hiding.119 The difference between zoology and all other sciences, with the slight exception of astronomy, is that they are invested in the search for stationary 18 specimens, while the specimens of zoology actually have the ability to hide, and thus remain hidden indefinitely.120 Two distinct behavioral strategies seemed to have evolved to enhance species survival.121 Some species are highly open and visible, some of which even move in herds, or flocks with naturally high populations.122 Other species are far less visible, with sufficiently lower population densities who survive via secretive and adaptive ways.123 An example of this can be seen in the contrast between pigeons, crows, and sparrows they can be observed by all, and owls, which are more difficult to observe in the wild. It is interesting to point out that examples of these behavioral adaptations can be found in and among related species such as the giraffe-okapi, baboon-orangutan, and crowjay.124 Borrowing Darwin’s phrase, cryptids are “lingering in protected and isolated situations,” such as thick vegetation, deep waters, or mountainous terrain. They are active and mobile, cryptids inevitably leave, from time to time the depths of their sanctuaries and occasionally come into the view of human beings.125 These creatures will eventually retreat into their prospective areas, thus creating the cryptozoological situation that an unknown animal is sighted by both natives and visitors in an area, but is absent from the zoology’s inventory.126 Confirming the existence or non-existence of elusive and rare animal species in a large geographic area is an ominous and frustrating endeavor.127 Some form of an opinion statement regarding the presence of a population is needed as part of environmental assessments or in developing resource management schemes and when a creature is an endangered one, confirming its presence may be required by law.128 When such a statement is based on a scientific study, with a stated possibility of error, then it is likely 19 to be viewed as an estimate rather than a subjective opinion.129 A question that I have personally received time and time again is as follows, “I go out hiking into the backcountry all the time, why haven’t I ever come across a sasquatch or some other unknown creature?” Well, to answer that, the following controlled experiment is an example of the difficulties viewing, encountering, and capturing animals, even known ones. The probability of non-detection within a specified population can be “estimated” with any degree of searching, and if the probability of finding any sign of a species during a single search is known with the suspected density in the habitat being searched.130 If a search effort is standardized and say one unit of the effort searches for tracks along a onemile sandy road after a rainstorm, or listens for sounds and vocalizations during a specific set-time then the number of successful searches (x) for an effort of (n) can be described via the binomial distribution.131 Estimates are dependent on the distribution, persistence, distinctiveness, and abundance of conclusive signs and the ability for the observer to notice them.132 Each factor is influenced by season, habitat, weather, human disturbance, age, sex numbers in the population and population density.133 Data on the resighting of marked white-tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus fawns were used in an experiment to determine and examine the feasibility of binomial distribution model.134 The area being studied was an 826-ha enclosure on Radford Army Ammunition plant in Dublin Virginia.135 The habitat was enclosed with a rolling grass-land, isolated stands of scattered red cedars Juniperus virginianus, and mature hardwoods, about 80-ha of the area had been planted with shortleaf pine Pinus echinata, few deer used any of these stands for cover.136 The area was well traversed with an extensive road system, for 20 easy travel and observation throughout the entire enclosure.137 Fawns were caught, tagged, and then released in the spring of 1969.138 A 30-km route was driven twice a day with the sightings recorded for each of the individually marked fawns sighted. Searches ceased after three weeks, at which time the fawns were old enough to begin traveling with their mothers.139 Detection of a conclusive sign was defined by sighting a fawn during a 30-km drive; this drive was the search effort.140 Seventy-three of the 81 fawns were known to have survived the three-week observation period, with the survivors serving as the subjects of study.141 The route was traversed twenty-four times during the observation period and with the deer individually tagged there were the equivalent of 1,752 search efforts, a total of seventy-three sightings occurred during the search.142 With this experiment in mind you can perhaps begin to appreciate the difficulties in searching for far rarer creatures like Sasquatch or the yeti in non-controlled environments. It is important and interesting to note that in 1892 a circus elephant named Charlie escaped and roamed about the town of Bucksport Maine and the surrounding woods.143 It took two weeks to find and capture the elephant.144 Population biologists are interested in population viability in response to the increasing threats of extinction for many species.145 The important theoretical conclusion from this kind of work is that stochastic processes play a critical role in the survival of small populations, these processes come in three categories; population uncertainty, environmental uncertainty, and genetic uncertainty. 146 Environmental factors range from major catastrophes such as earthquakes, fires and disease to mild environmental weather variations.147 Demographic factors include variations in sex ratio, age of first reproduction, number of offspring, and the distribution of offspring over a certain 21 lifetime, genetic uncertainty involves inbreeding and loss of variation through genetic drift.148 A population’s survival is based upon its resilience, which refers to its ability to cope with normal birth and death events, which are then determined by a species reproductive potential, social system, generation time, and the severity of unforeseen environmental events.149 Species populations normally have a considerable capacity to resist threats to their survival through various responses such as fitness or adaptability. However, very rare species have a far reduced capacity to resist those kinds of threats because of increased susceptibility due to low densities.150 Demographers tend to model populations by two different equations, the first being the exponential growth model.151 Here N is the number of individuals in a population and r is the instantaneous rate of increase this is a decent estimator when dealing with populations in an unlimited environment.152 Eventually something puts a stop to population growth and numbers begin to decline; it is unlikely that this growth model is applicable to cryptozoological specimens.153 The second model is known as the logistic equation model where a population grows exponentially till it reaches a certain rate of growth then begins to decline as resources decline, under this the population will hopefully eventually stabilize at a point called carrying capacity, where a the number of individuals present are at the limit that a given area can support.154 The logistic model is more applicable to cryptozoology, however it is unrealistic because few populations have been observed to rise to some level, and then remain constant over an extended period of time, and they instead fluctuate both drastically and stochastically.155 22 Taking this into account how likely is it that certain cryptids exist in viable populations? In 1972 and 1973, the maximum population density of unknown creatures in Loch Ness, based upon ecologically defensible principles it was concluded that the Loch could support 10-20 individual unknown animals of 1000-1500 kg, and about eight meters in length, larger numbers of smaller unknown animals could be supported, but even if twenty large creatures lived in the Loch it is unlikely that all of them would be part of a breeding population, some being either too young, or too old to reproduce.156 A population of twenty individuals is at a serious risk of extinction with a population size that small it would be difficult for them to survive any kind of environmental stochasticity whatsoever.157 There are a few documented cases of small animal populations that have persevered for thousands of years. One example is the Devils Hole pupfish, Cyprinodon diabolis. This creature has survived in a small spring in the Nevada desert for 10-20,000 years with its population size continually fluctuating every season. This situation is due to the conditions of the spring that had remained constant, up until recently, when it had become affected by human activity.158 It is important to continue the investigation and research of cryptozoology, but for this to happen correctly the “cryptozoologist” needs to follow a strict guideline and show that it isn’t just a field full of uneducated buffoons. This isn’t happening, thus with cryptozoology the sudo-scientist tends to garner more attention from the media that the educated scientists that could perhaps shed some (reliable) light on the topic. An important pro-argument when dealing with terrestrial cryptids is tracks, however many zoologists refuse to accept tracks as evidence for unknown animals. Fortunately, as 23 I have shown earlier in this paper, paleontology does.159 In cryptozoology, footprint evidence plays a large role in the investigating the identity and reality of relic hominids such as the Sasquatch, Yeti, etc.160 Grover Krantz argues No matter how incredible it may seem that the Sasquatch exists and has remained uncaught, it is even more incredible to believe in all the attributes of the hypothetical human track-maker…Even if none of the hundreds of sightings had ever occurred, we would still be forced to conclude that a giant bipedal primate does indeed inhabit the forests of the Pacific Northwest”161 There is no denying that many footprints have been faked, but the question isn’t if some of the footprints have been faked, but if some of them are authentic, and if even one of the prints was created by an unknown hominid than it is necessary to erase the connotation and assumptions associated with myth and accept the reality.162 There are many differing objections to cryptozoology and the legitimacy of it. It is argued by some that the Earth today is fully explored and well-known, even in its most remote areas.163 It is true that the amount of Terra incognitae has receded much over the centuries, but it is also true that there are areas which are not fully explored, as is shown with the occasional discovery of a river, waterfall, island, or even mountain.164 A few examples of this include the 2001 discovery of a 123,500-acre and never before seen forest in Ecuador. In 2003 satellite surveys revealed 1,000 previously unknown islands in Indonesia, In 2002 Russian scientists found an underground river beneath the Sahara Desert, it was deemed a world miracle.165 The two regions who’s exploration are by nomeans finished are Antarctica “the seventh continent” and the vast oceans of the world, and with the detailed ocean floor maps that are presented via satellite imagery, it doesn’t signify that we know its entire fauna.166 A second, though dwindling argument against cryptozoology is that there are no new species of animals left to be discovered.167 This argument couldn’t be farther from the 24 truth, and there are very few today who continue to believe this. Between 1993 and 2008 there were 408 new mammal species alone, without mentioning the enormous number of reptile, fish, bird, and insect species discovered, which easily reach into the thousands.168 Below is a chart demonstrating the taxonomic composition of new mammal species (excluding marine species) discovered between 1993 and 2008. Some orders have more * or fewer ** new species than expected by their species Order Families Genera New New species New species with with Species with probably at risk of new New Restricted extinction species species distribution Afrosoricida 2 2 12 8 2 Artiodactyla 5 9 11** 7 1 Carnivora 1 2 2* 2 2 Macroscelidae 1 1 1 1 1 Chiroptera 8 44 94* 75 6 Cingulata 1 1 1 1 0 Dasyuromorpha 1 4 6* 2 0 Didelphimorphia 2 5 8* 8 0 Diprodontia 2 6 11* 11 0 Erinaceomorpha 1 1 1 1 0 Lagomorpha 2 3 5 3 0 Monotremata 1 1 1 1 0 Paucituberculata 1 1 1* 1 1 Peramelemorphia 1 1 2* 2 0 Pilosa 1 1 1 1 0 Primates 9 16 55* 51 10 Rodentia 16 87 174* 29 4 Soricomorpha 2 9 22** 17 2 TOTAL 57 195 408 221 34 169 Each year brings the discovery of new life forms, a fact that surprises no one. All that we can do is carry on as in the past and literally harvest blindly.170 It is possible to improve the tactics and instruments of searches, making them more systematic, holding them on a broader scale, and a more energetic one as well and this is the aim of traditional zoology.171 It cannot be expected in those cases to orient the search for certain animals in the hopes of hastening their discovery, is an essential aim of cryptozoological work.172 25 It is possible to calculate with a satisfactory degree of approximation the number of new species we can expect to discover in the coming decades; the number is based on those already known, but we have no way of knowing the precise number.173 The French zoologist Lucien Berland (1888-1962) wrote, “On the whole, it does not seem exaggerated to think that there must exist about 5 million species on the globe, and perhaps even more, of which 9/10 are insects.” if this is the case than less than a quarter of all species presently living have been cataloged.174 Cryptozoological endeavors can, in most cases, only be realized through a mix of eyewitness reports, indigenous lore, traditions, tracks, among other sour175 For a cryptids to be reported, or to bring attention to itself, it is necessary for it to literally; bring attention to itself and hence be of an appreciable size.176 This is a subjective concept and should perhaps be supplemented with, by that of an abnormal size with in a certain group, few, with the exception of professionals would report a bird the size of a sparrow, or a minnow sized fish, yet all would gaze in wonderment of an ant the size of a Chihuahua.177 The animals that cryptozoology is concerned with are those that are elusive, woven with legend, and are characterized by some odd, striking, and unexpected trait, even if this trait isn’t related to size it is important that a minimum size is essential.178 The abnormal cryptid, prehistoric survivors, obscure and unknown lake creatures, relic hominids are not the only candidates for cryptozoology, but the recently thought extinct creatures, the dodo, carrier pigeon, ivory billed woodpecker, and the thylacine are perfect examples of this and though they are not quite as exciting as coming upon a dinosaur 26 roaming in a deep dark jungle, the importance of rediscovering a once thought extinct creature is equally important to cryptozoology as discovering any unknown one. The distortion and misrepresentation of cryptozoology in the media Some cryptids are more “popular” than others, thus garner much more publicity, both positive and negative, which leaves the cryptid and those who investigate it open for wider scrutiny and skeptical hounding particularly when dealing with the tabloid media. The tabloid media owns the exclusive rights to cryptozoology and is eager to exploit people’s fascination with the paranormal and all things “monster”.179 This fascination has done little more than shape cryptozoology into a “cult of the mysterious” shading it with pseudoscience and out right tomfoolery.180 The commercialization of cryptozoology with various television shows that report and investigate it and then hide behind a façade of pragmatic thinking and objectivity, but the intent is more on sensationalism and selling a product than actually informing the viewer of scientific possibilities.181 When a journalist writes a story for a newspaper or other similar outlet on an event or sighting of some strange creature, Nessie (The creature of Loch Ness) for example, scientific accuracy is almost never a concern.182 What is important to the media outlet is that the report deal with something newsworthy and the contents of the report contains information credible to other members of the media community, thus invoking unfortunate stereotypes like “monster” or “sea serpent.”183 These connotations seem completely normal and acceptable to the audience. The negative tone “monster” is in effect a result of the need for routine in the news, especially in print media the tone of 27 cryptozoology related stories is what is called “angle” and is what is “necessary” to give direction to news stories in every outlet.184 In an example of this “angle” Ron Westrum gave a talk at the Manlike Monsters Conference at the University of British Columbia in 1978, of his presentation and discussion the only comments published in a magazine account of the conference were only semi-accurate and of the “off-the-cuff” comments made after the initial talk, the substance of which Westrum labored for several days on were completely ignored.185 The title of the article was Bigfoot Follies.186 To better understand the media's view of cryptozoology, walk into any bookstore and you will find any book associated with cryptozoology in the metaphysical or occult section, mixed with titles related to ufology, the Bermuda Triangle, and parapsychology (ghosts).187 This situation increases the reluctance of scientists to delve into cryptozoology with any objectivity and look for or even consider the possibility of cryptids, even the most down to Earth representatives.188 The challenge ahead is moving the discussion and consideration of existing cryptids out of the realm of the “tabloid media” and into the field of legitimate science such as zoology, biology, and paleontology.189 The question stands: how do we legitimize something that is so far on the fringe? How does cryptozoology earn the respect that it deserves? It has to prove that one of these creatures exists, today. The discovery of a new deer, shark, or big cat will not be adequate. It will need to be something awe-inspiring. It will literally have to be something as groundbreaking as a surviving dinosaur, relic hominid, or something else that is zoologically revolutionary. 28 Animal/cryptid discoveries The following are examples of animal discoveries. I want to show that many times our knowledge of creatures begins with sightings and native lore. Creatures not known to outsiders, and are common to the indigenous peoples, and have proven to exist even if they first seem impractical. The Aardvark 190 Orycteropus afer, the aardvark, the only living member of the order Tubulidentata, is a creature with non-functional columnar cheek teeth, a long snout and ears, and a pig-like body.191 Peter Kolbe wrote of his travels in Africa in his book, Caput Bonae Spei i.e. a complete description of the African Cape of Good Hope (1719) of a strange eight foot long mammal that was referred to as the aardvark, or erdvark, which translated roughly as ‘earth-pig’. This name supposedly came from its burrowed home, and that it apparently tasted like pork.192 This creature eluded discovery until Kolbe’s arrival to Cape Town in 1705, due to its subterranean and nocturnal lifestyle.193 The creature’s appearance alone made it hard to accept as an actual living creature. Count Georges Louis Le Clerc de Buffon (1725-73), one of the 18th century’s zoological authorities, refused to accept that the aardvark existed until 1766 when fellow scientists Peter Simon Pallas (1741-1811) had presented new details regarding the aardvark and presented it with a scientific name. 29 In 1795 it was renamed by Professor E. Geoffroy Saint-hilaire.194 It was dubbed Orycterpus afer (African digging-foot).195 The Mountain Gorilla 196 The Mountain Gorilla’s existence was established in 1901. It was given the scientific name Gorilla beringei two years later in honor of the man who brought the first skin back from the Congo, Captain Oscar von Beringe.197 Before this the only known gorilla species was the lowland gorilla, Gorilla gorilla198 which was originally recognized in 1847.199 Gorillas have a limited distribution range within equatorial Africa, inhabiting the dense forests where they are difficult to see and capture, and have never been common, at least during the last hundred years.200 Before either gorilla was officially recognized they had a mythology similar to that of other supposed relic-hominids such as Sasquatch, Yeti, Yowie, etc. They were known as the “abominable men of the woods,”201 but it wasn’t until 1861 that native accounts of a “monster ape” came to the attention of western scientists though most refused to give any merit to what were at first considered legends.202 The native called them ngagi and ngila, but then Ewart Grogan supposedly found the skeleton of a mountain gorilla, but as in most circumstances in cryptozoology he was unable to remove the evidence out of the 30 mountainous area.203 In 1902 Oscar von Beringe shot and killed two gorillas on the Virungas’ Mount Sabinio; after they were shot both of the animals fell into a valley. It was only after great difficulty that Beringe was able to recover one of the bodies to show the world.204 Recently an intermediate species between the gorilla (Gorilla gorilla) and the chimpanzee, (Pan troglodytes) has sparked the interests of zoologists, primatologists, and cryptozoologists alike.205 Stories of a new ape known as the “Bondo” or “Bili” coming out of the Congo have been circulating for some time now.206 In 1908 a Belgian army officer returned from the Congo with two skulls from the town of Bili.207 He gave them to Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa and in 1927 the museums curator classified them as a new subspecies of gorilla, Gorilla gorilla uellensis.208 Primatologist Shelly Williams of the Jane Goodall Institute had a close encounter with four of these creatures, they charged at her through the brush from ten meters away before stopping.209 They have bodies like gorillas and sleep on the ground like a gorilla, yet they possess the facial characteristics of a chimpanzee and eat a fruit rich diet like a chimp.210 Because of their elusiveness and large size they have no known predators, thus the locals call them “lion killers”.211 The new ape also fishes for ants with “tools” that are several times longer than the ones used by chimps.212 31 The Bili or Bondo 213 214 Still some mystery exists in regard to the gorilla, or if it could have been the culprit behind the Engot and the Zabairo. The Engot is described as a large and aggressive primate from Gabon that killed and ate humans.215 The Zabairo, another supposed unknown primate that is reported in Cote d’Ivoire, West Africa and is said to be a large nocturnal ape, has even been reported as carrying a torch to light its way.216 The only known gorilla population is 1500 miles southwest of where the sightings take place, and researchers are up in arms to give credit to the sightings of the Zabairo, or theorize whether or not this is mistaken identity and nothing more than an as yet unknown population of gorillas,217 but there is a solid consensus that the Engot was/is a gorilla. The Komodo dragon 218 32 It wasn’t until 1912 that the largest known lizard, the Komodo dragon, Varanus komodoensis was proven to exist.219 It was on the island of Komodo where an airman was forced to land. The airman returned home with tales of ferocious “dragons” twelve feet in length that ate goats, pigs, deer, and horses. Also in 1912 Lieutenant Van Steyn van Hensbroek killed a seven foot dragon and sent the skin and a photo to Major P.A. Owens, the director of Zoological Museum and Botanical Gardens in Buitenzorg, Java.220 The Museum sent a Malay animal catcher to Komodo, he returned with four living specimens, the largest of which was nine feet six inches in length.221 The Okapi 222 For decades there were tales of a strange creature that lurked in the jungles of Africa; visiting Europeans brushed aside the tales that natives would tell of a strange creature, a chimera of the giraffe, (Giraffa camelopardalis) and the zebra, (Equus burchell).i223 Sir Harry Johnston was exploring the Congo for some time, when in 1900 he rescued several Mbuti pygmies that were kidnapped by a German impresario that wanted to display them at the 1900 Paris World’s Fair.224 The Mbuti stayed with Johnston while he could secure their safe return to their homeland. It was during this stay that he gained their trust and they began to tell him stories of the okapi Okapia johnstoni, although they referred to it as “o’ api, which was described to him as a mule sized creature with zebra stripes.225 33 On the way to return the Mbuti, Johnston stopped at Fort Mbeni in the Semliki Forest; he was told there was a pelt somewhere in the camp that had been cut up into bandoliers and belts for the Soldiers of the Bambuba tribe.226 Johnston, excited by this new evidence, put an expedition together immediately with a few of the Mbuti as his guides.227 The shape of the tracks of the okapi were not what Johnston expected; where horses and zebras have one toe, or hoof, the okapi was cloven hoofed with two toes.228 Unfortunately the expedition had to be abandoned after a few days members of his party came down with malaria.229 Johnston sent the pieces of skin to Dr. P.L. Slater at the Zoological Society of London, he examined the strips and found that hair on the sample was similar to zebra and a giraffe, but different that of an antelope.230 In 1901 Johnston received two skulls, he made the discovery that it wasn’t related to the zebra, or antelope at all, but instead due to the size and shape of the skull was a relative of the giraffe, perhaps a descendent of an ancient giraffid like the Helladontherium that was found in Asia several million years ago.231 The new animal was dubbed Equus johnstoni on February 5, 1901.232 It wasn’t till 1918 that the first live okapi was brought out of the Congo to Europe.233 34 Giant Panda 234 The French missionary Father Armand David crossed through eastern Asia from 1865 to 1869, and on March 11, 1869, David was having tea with an acquaintance.235 David noticed hung on the wall of his host’s house an odd fur that he recognized as a strange black and white bear he had heard rumor of.236 The first known mention of this creature is found in a manuscript that dates back to 621 A.D. during the reign of the first Tang emperors.237 David commissioned Chinese hunters to retrieve a specimen for him, and on March 23rd they returned with a cub that they had to kill to carry home. The fur of this creature was white all over its body with the exception of its shoulders, chest, ears, the tip of its nose, legs, and around its eyes.238 On April 1st the hunters brought David the skeleton and fur of an adult, after this the creature disappeared and between the years 1869-1929 it wouldn’t be seen or heard from again for approximately sixty years.239 In 1929 when it was thought that the creature would never be heard from again, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt and his brother Kermit found one while hunting, it was dozing in a hollow pine tree, they shot it and it was then placed in the Field Museum in Chicago.240 Further slaughter followed in 1931, 1934, 1935, and 1936, but in 1937 Ruth Harkness found a single cub “crying” in a tree, she 35 brought it back to the United States but it soon died, she had better luck the second time around with the Giant Panda, Ailuropoda melanoleuca.241 Vu Quang ox, or the Saola 242 In 1992 the zoological and cryptozoological communities were surprised to learn of the discovery of the Vu Quang ox, later known as the Saola, Pseudoryx nghetinhensis. The animal was believed to be a species of goat, but the examination of three different skins showed that it was a living bovid, and the largest land mammal to be discovered since the Kouprey, (Bos sauveli).243 The Saola was part of the area’s hunting lore and thus carries importance for cryptozoology, it was an animal familiar to natives of the Mekong River area of Cambodia-Laos.244 The Saola differs from all other described genera in DNA, appearance, morphology, cranial, and dental features.245 It is important to note that it was not until 1994 that scientists had come upon a living specimen.246 36 The Coelacanth 247 On December 22, 1938 Marjorie Courtenay-Latimer, director of the East London Museum, discovered a strange fish buried beneath various known fish on a docked South African fishing boat.248 She described it as the most beautiful fish she had ever seen: it was five feet in length, pale blue, with flecks of white and an iridescent silver-green-blue sheen over its entire body.249 This fish has more than enough interesting features to attract the attention of the scientific community, it was a living fossil that was supposed have died out some 65 million years ago. It has a oil-filled notochord instead of a bony spine and an odd intracranial joint in its skull which allows it to open its mouth unusually wide. The coelacanth, Latimeria chalumnae , is a member of the lobe-finned fishes, the very ones that are believed to have given rise to our amphibians, of which later creatures evolved from.250 It was thought that the coelacanth’s habitat was limited to the area surrounding the Comoro Islands; another coelacanth wouldn’t be found again for fourteen years. On December 21, 1952, another one was caught on the Island of Anjouan, off the coast of Mozambique. It was later learned that islanders had been catching and eating the coelacanth for generations. This is evidence that a creature from prehistory can survive into modern times and even interact with man right under his nose. 37 The Kraken AKA the Giant Squid 251 252 253 From the darkest depths of the ocean comes an all devouring “monster” with multiple arms that captures and draws its prey into the depths with it where it can shred and consume its victom with its huge and powerful beak-like mouth. The creature I write of is the kraken. I was young when I first leaned of the kraken and with the exception of various fictional stories, representations of the kraken were depicted as a monstrous octopus or squid. Of all the creatures of legend, it is rare to find such a correspondence between an actual animal and one that is supposedly a mythically created one.254 The kraken is real. As real as any known taxonomically recognizable creature, the kraken is 38 the colossal squid, Mesonychotesuthis hamiltoni, or its slightly smaller relative the giant squid, Architeuthis dux.255 How do we approach this realization? The legends of the kraken first appear in Homer’s odyssey in the form of Scylla.256 …she is a dreadful monster and no one not even a god could face her without being terror-struck. She has twelve mis-shapen feet, and six necks of the most prodigious length; and at the end of each neck she has a frightful head with three rows of teeth in each all set very close together, so that they would crunch any one to death in a moment, and she sits deep within her shady cell thrusting out her heads and peering all round the rock, fishing for dolphins or dogfish or any other monster she can catch.257 With this realization it must be noted that the Kraken was a cryptozoological issue and the existence of the colossal squid was in question.258 It remained a mystery up until 1873 when the severed tentacle of a giant squid was found in the waters of Conception Bay, a month later a whole specimen was discovered allowing for a few photographs to convince the American and British zoologists.259 By the end of the 1800s there were several that had been washed to shore in various areas across the globe.260 In 2007 the fishing boat San Aspiring was fishing for Patagonian toothfish in Arctic waters south of New Zealand when the crew was shocked to hook and pull up a 450 kilo squid, which was the first adult colossal squid caught, ever.261 It took two hours for the crew to pull it in.262 Its eyes were as large as dinner plates and was ten meters long, so large that if it were cut into calamari rings the rings would have been as large as tractor tires.263 Still, some are open to debate that the Kraken and the colossal squid are not the same, as the colossal squid would not be able to destroy and sink a large sailing vessel as some early legends stated that it could and did.264 39 These above mentioned animals do not even begin to scratch the surface of the animals that have been discovered that were considered nothing more than hearsay or tall tales. In April of 2009 is was reported that a new population of orangutan, Pongo pygmaeus was discovered in a mountainous area of Indonesia, with an estimated number of two thousand; this was a previously unknown population265 In 2006 the Lazarus taxa popped up again with the discovery of the Jurassic shrimp, Neoglyphea neocaledoncia, alive and well It was found on an underwater peak in the Coral Sea and was the oldest organism listed in the 2006 Census of Marine Life, this census also listed five hundred new marine species discoveries since the previous census266 Jurassic Shrimp 267 A few of the above-mentioned creatures prove to us that myths and legends are many times based on reality. There are far more examples of myth-to-reality animal discoveries. I am certain that there will be many more to come. This is just one of the reasons that cryptozoology must not be thrown aside as nothing more that an arcane science. There are literally thousands of sightings of scientifically undocumented/poorly understood animals all over the planet. With this many sightings varying both morphologically and geographically it can be hypothesized that a good number of these unidentifiables can and will eventually be proven to exist most likely in a less-than- 40 monstrous and mythical form, though it is important to keep and open mind when investigating these unknowns. Those involved in cryptozoological research must stay vigilant for hoaxes. Hoaxes We cannot let the fact that there are undiscovered animals cloud the scientific mind from seeing and potentially being fooled by deliberate frauds and publicity seeking hoaxes. There have been numerous cases where scientists and cryptozoologists have been hoodwinked by manufactured stories and cryptid replicas. When put to closer scrutiny, or in some newer cases, DNA testing, the truth of a faked specimen exposed. Here I will present a few examples of such frauds. The April 1995 issue of the American science magazine Discover featured an article about a “hairless mole-like creature from the Antarctic. It was described as a creature with a heat-emitting bony plate on its brow, for melting tunnels in the ice beneath unsuspecting penguins, which the creature can seize and devour.”268 The article featured an impressive photograph and the idea of such a distinctive new species attracted quite a bit of attention. With subsequent reports appearing in many other publications, the reality of the forgery wasn’t revealed until June 1995.269 It should be noted that the name of the biologist who had discovered the creature was Aprile Pazzo, Italian for April fool.270 In the spring of 1984, the London Zoo began to publicize the arrival of a new animal.271 This new animal could mimic its human observers, clapping when they clapped, waving when they waved etc.272 It resembled a shaggy bear, had a white chest, toes, and a white mandarin-like moustache that hung down to its cheeks. It was said to have originated from an area in the eastern Himalayas a hundred miles or so from 41 Bangladesh.273 The locals called it the Lir-pa loof. It was the only known member of a new mammalian family, and was given the name Eccevita mimicus.274 It generated a lot of public interest; the Lir-pa loof made its television debut soon after its initial unveiling, and appeared with its keeper George Callard on the BBC television show That’s Life on April 1st.275 There were several clues given to expose the fraud this creature was, loose fitting skin that could conceal a child or stooping man, Lir-pa loof spelled backward is April fool and it’s scientific name Eccevita is Latin for ‘that’s life.’.276 The Jackalope, a jackrabbit with the antlers, can be found in bars across the United States, as well on postcards throughout the west.277 Fur-bearing trout, a species of trout said to live in the rivers and lakes of North America and Canada where the water is so cold that they evolved and grew a coat of fur to prevent from freezing,278 even to thesupposedly real Chupacabra the South American “goat sucker” has made it into the annuls of sideshow fakery. From 1917 to 1920 Swiss Geologist and adventurer Dr. Francois de Loys (1892-1935) conducted an expedition into the mountain range Sierra de Perijaa along the ColumbiaVenezuela border.279 While there Loys claims he and his men encountered two creatures resembling giant monkeys, but without tails. These creatures became angry at the presence of the adventurers and defecated in their hands and threw their feces at the men. Frightened, the men fired upon the creatures killing one, as the other fled.280 The body of the dead creature was carried back to the men’s camp, set upon a packing crate, its chin propped-up with a stick, and photographed.281 According to Loys, every photograph of the creature was lost, with the exception of one. When the boat they were traveling along a river in capsized, the one photograph was retrieved and in excellent 42 condition (an oddity in the case of cryptid photos) was then published in the Illustrated London News article written by Loys on June 15th 1929.282 French Professor George Montandon was quick to declare that it was a new species. He also dubbed the creature Ameranthropides loysi283 De Loys Ape 284 Both science and the cryptozoological world have been divided on the legitimacy of the Loys photo. Most zoologists dismiss the creature as nothing more than a spider monkey Ateles geoffroyi with its tail cut off, as did Ivan T. Sanderson, one of the original and well educated cryptozoologists.285 Bernard Heuvelman (the father of cryptozoology) believed that the creature was impressive and used the crate in the photo for scale and affirmed to himself that it was a new species of spider monkey, of considerable size, as much as 1.6m tall.286 A recent discovery and possible motive for French zoologist George Montandon to legitimize the creature was discovered by cryptozoologists Loren Coleman and Michel Raynal when they reported in an article published in the autumn 1996 issue of The Anomalist. Montandon had proposed a racist theory of human evolution, his theory claimed that instead of a modern-day multi-racial human species, Homo sapiens had 43 arisen from a single-common-ancestor. Its races springing up independently of one another, allowing for each race of human to have each evolved from a differing species of ape.287 Montandon proposed Africans sprang from the gorilla, Asians from orangutans. His major problem with this theory was he didn’t have an ape of origin for Native Americans, but with Ameranthropides loysi he had his answer, and his “missing link.”288 In the 1990s Karl Shuker came upon three different sources that claimed to have seen a second photo of the creature, next to two natives. They did look like a spider monkeys, all but one of an unusually large size, while the natives appeared to be adults, but short in stature.289 In 2001 an article surfaced, published in Anartia, Publicaciones Ocasionales del Museo de Biologia de La Universidad del Zulia, written by Angel L. Viloria, Bernardo Urbani, and Franco Urbani.290 It presented an examination of the entire case history of the creature, basically stating that the creature was indeed nothing more than a marimonda spider monkey that de Loys adopted as a pet while in the jungle and after it died while on their expedition he cut off its tail and propped it on the crate as a practical joke.291 In August of 2008 two “Bigfoot hunters” out of Georgia claimed to have found and recovered the body of a dead Bigfoot.292 Rick Dyer, a former corrections officer who also ran a business offering Bigfoot tours, and Sheriff deputy Matt Whitton also claimed to have spotted three other creatures within the vicinity watching him as he dragged the body out of the woods.293 After much fanfare it proved to be nothing more than a popular costume placed into an open freezer, covered in animal entrails.294 The “body” 44 295 Surviving dinosaurs? What is a “living fossil?” The meaning is relevant here because in some cryptozoological cases we are concerned with the possible survival of species universally thought to be extinct.296 For most people, a “living fossil” is an extraordinary looking and amazing creature that survived from a vanished age, yet these same people likely wash themselves with the skeleton of a sponge, something that hasn’t changed since the beginning of the Paleozoic era.297 In your basement or cellar, there are dozens of “living fossils” from the Devonian and Carboniferous periods spinning their webs and scurrying about.298 There are many examples of these kinds of “living fossils” so it is perhaps best to confine the term “living fossil” to groups otherwise thought “extinct.”299 It is generally agreed among cryptozoologists and cryptozoologically inclined scientists to limit the term “living fossil” to very small groups of survivors that have perpetuated themselves through the ages with very few effects of evolution, while larger groups have been undergoing immense changes and thus continue to give birth to new types.300 A “living fossil” is best described as a stationary species.301 There are “living fossils” the oldest being the radiolarians, with remains being found in pre-Cambrian strata, meaning that they date as far back as 2,000,000,000 years.302 The opossum, Didelphis virginiana, and the armadillo, Dasypus novemcinctus, date back to 45 the Eocene roughly 70,000,000 years ago.303 The point here is that there may be no creature, however primitive that couldn’t potentially have survived up until today. We are finding lingering examples in many different areas around the world, yet when someone suggests the possibility of a surviving dinosaur, or something similar to it, a flying reptile, or a relic hominid, exasperation follows.304 The most infamous of potential prehistoric survivors, though only moderately wellknown to those not familiar with cryptozoology, is the Mokele-Mbembe. The MokeleMbembe dwells within the swamps, pools and waterways of Central West Africa, specifically the Likouala region of central Africa, which is made up of jungle swamp and rainforest. This area is roughly 60,000 square miles in circumference, and is one of the fewplaces on Earth that hasn’t changed (much) in over sixty-five million years.305 Lake Tele 306 46 307 Mokele-Mbembe or “The one who stops the flow of rivers” The Mokele-Mbembe is a creature whose morphology is best described as sauropodlike. The size of the creature varies, some claim it is no bigger than an elephant, while other reports have it at fifteen to thirty-feet in length. This is attributed to its neck and tail.308 Its color varies, sometimes being gray, brown, or rust, and sometimes donning a frill across its head, or entire back.309 There have not been any documented descriptions of hair. The head is like that of a snake but larger than the largest “known” python.310 It has very short, elephant-like legs, with three visible “claws” on its hind legs.311 Its footprints are rounded, about a foot in diameter and when the prints are observed in the sand, claw marks are present.312 Its principle food is an indigenous fruit known as the Malombo, which is a species of the Landolphia gourd. Besides its generally placid temperament, the Mokele-Mbembe can become very aggressive if provoked, capsizing boats and killing the occupants, though not consuming them.313 In 1913 a German expedition to Northern Congo (then part of Cameroon) was put together.314 It was led by Captain Freiherr von Stein zu Lausnitz, was to last two years, but was cut short because of WWI.315 The official findings of this expedition were never published, however certain aspects were obtained by cryptozoologists, accounts of the 47 Mokele-Mbembe were collected, however these reports placed a short horn, or tooth at the base of the creatures head, Roy Mackal, who put an expedition together in 1980 and again in 81. He theorized that this addition was an error on Lausnitz, mistaking accounts of the Mokele-Mbembe with those of the Emela-Ntouka, another cryptid/prehistoric survivor in the area.316 Other “prehistoric survivors” In 1912 Carl Hagenbeck, “one of the world’s greatest animal collectors,”317 was convinced that dinosaur-like creatures still lived in Africa.318 In his book, Beasts and Men, he wrote of accounts from “English gentlemen” who had been traveling through Rhodesia, both from opposite directions and of his own adventures in the Dark Continent.319 Natives in the area told of a great water creature, half elephant and half dragon. Drawings of the creature can be found on the walls of Central African caves.320 There were so many stories from so many sources that it was apparent to him that there was indeed some kind of unknown creature living in the area.321 Emela-Ntouka 322 The Emela-Ntouka, known in other areas as Aseka-moke and Ngamba-Namae, is the second most mentioned of Africa’s prehistoric survivors. It is best described as a ceratopsian-like dinosaur, or perhaps an undiscovered rhinoceros. It is slightly smaller than an elephant, with heavy legs that support the body from underneath, a heavy 48 crocodile like tail, and skin of a grayish-brown color.323 There are no ridges or frills along the neck, but the neck is short with a horn, (not made of hair like that of a rhino, but like that of an elephants tusk) protruding from the front of the head.324 It is semi-aquatic and a foliage-eater, but most interesting is its earned nick-name, “killer of Elephants;” it is known to kill, but not consume elephants and hippopotami.325 In the book The Lungfish, the Dodo, and the Unicorn, Willy Ley mentions a mysterious animal called “the River Elephant,” sometime after the discovery of the Pigmy Hippo in 1913 a piece of skin was presented by a settler living near Lefini, on the Congo River.326 The skin was covered with a thick red fur. It by appeared to have belonged to a rather large animal, resembling the hide of an elephant.327 Lucien Blancou, chief game inspector in French Equatorial Africa collected a great deal about mysterious animals between 1949 and 1953.328 He spoke of Indigenous peoples north of the Kelle district, mainly the pygmies, who knew of a forest creature “larger than a buffalo, almost as large as an elephant, but not a hippopotamus. It is feared more than any other dangerous animal.”329 Its footprints are described as being similar to a rhinoceros, but they do not mention a horn.330 Around Ouesso the natives talk of another such creature, but this one does have a horn, or horns on its head.331 In Epena, Dongou, and Impfondo there is a creature that disembowels elephants. One was supposed to have been killed twenty years ago, somewhere on the Ubangi and in the Belgian Congo.332 Then there is the Mbielu-Mbielu-Mbielu. This anomaly is a semi-aquatic creature with planks growing out of its back, something, according to native description, resembling a Stegosaurus.333 The planks are large, and should not be mistaken for ridges along the 49 back,334 however there is no fossil evidence that the stegosaurus was an aquatic creature.335 It is suggested that this creature could simply be another mystery animal known as the Nguma-Monene which is seen in the Mataba tributary of the Ubangi River. According to description it is a huge snake roughly 130ft long, has a serrated ridge along its back, which consists of triangular protrusions, it can walk on land, has a low-slung body and a forked tongue.336 On the 1981 Congo/Mokele-Mbembe expedition and at its base camp on the waters edge of Lake Telle, there were frequent observations of large turtle whose shell reached at least two meters in length.337 There are tales/sightings of a turtle similar to this one that was four to five meters in diameter. This turtle is known locally as the Ndendeki.338 The Ndendeki’s shell is more rounded than other known turtles, the natives do not fear it, or consider it a danger to anyone.339 There isn’t much information about its diet but it is assumed that it feeds upon detritus.340 The Mahamba, is a massive crocodile somewhere between twelve to fifteen meters in length.341 When the Lingala speak of this creature they are adamant to point out that the Mahamba isn’t just an oversized specimen of the ordinary variety and that it is not the Nguma-Monene.342 While exploring the Congo River in the late nineteenth century the Belgiam explorer John Reinhardt Werner reported seeing crocodiles of this size on more than one occasion.343 The 1980 and 81 expeditions led into the Congo in search of the Mokele-Mbembe, among other prehistoric survivors, the expedition was led by Roy Mackal. The expedition’s main destination was Boha, whose inhabitants “own” Lake Telle, one of the reported habitats of the Mokele-Mbembe.344 50 The Likouala region, or the Epena district, with all of its forests and swamps remains almost entirely unfrequented by man because of inaccessibility. This area is a refuge for a wide variety of species.345 Lake Telle itself is very shallow.346 With known depths of two to three feet with sporadically placed deep holes, roughly six feet deep.347 The water is dark, filled with rotting vegetation, and underwater visibility does not exceed fiftycentimeters.348 The bottom is muddy, with an estimated layer of seventy centimeters of sediment in the middle, and one hundred and fifty around the sides.349 There are various inlets that branch off into small forest rivers, but most of them disappear in the thick vegetation.350 It seems to me that this lake would be, at least in depth and appearance, similar to Utah Lake: very shallow, very murky, and muddy. This “dinosaur” is supposed to be able to entirely submerge itself in this lake, so if this is the case it would have to A: lounge about in the deep-holes of the lake, or B: be a very small version of a sauropod, or something else entirely. I understand the Mokele-Mbembe has been seen in areas other than Lake Tele. Outside of Africa in the Malaysian state of Pahang is the lake Tasek Bera.351 It is known for magnificent long-necked creatures with cobra–like hoods, which are called Ular Tedong.352 They can raise their long necks out of the water to the “height of a palm tree.”353 They have a large snake-like head, with two snail-like horns, their neck is long and gradually grows to a width of six-ft. where is hits the water.354 Their head and neck are covered with thumb-nail size scales, however the body of these creatures has never been seen though a tail has been reported above the surface. Also the creature changes 51 colors as it grows older, when young it is a salty-gray and as it matures it turns to a golden-hue.355 Dinosaur thoughts When evaluating most dinosaurian examples of “living fossils” we find that there isn’t any evidence for their existence, other than anecdotal. Everything that we know about any of these creatures comes entirely from word of mouth, the theories and findings derived from the various expeditions, and interviews with indigenous peoples in the areas the creatures are said to inhabit, the trails the creature(s) may have made while lumbering about the wood, and the various caves seen around certain bodies of water and river ways where it is assumed a like-creature could rest. The only actual piece of evidence we have are the photos of what may be fresh footprints of one of the living fossils. In what was guessed to be either August or September of 1966, Atelier Yvan Ridel, a professional French wild-life photographer, and a person considered to be “entirerly reliable” by Heuvelmans,356 came upon and photographed what he believed to be the footprint of a living fossil.357 The photo was taken in the Congo (Brazza) on a steep bank.358 The creature’s tracks led out of a mass of reeds crossing a beach area and into the water.359 The print that was photographed was the clearest one and was measured at 25 cm in width, while the stride of the creature was measured at around 1.2 meters with the legs being 1.2 meters apart.360 It is hypothesized that the print is of the Emela-Ntouka. Ridel believes the print could not have been that of a hippopotamus, Hippopotamus amphibus, it instead looked “superficially” like a rhinoceros, Diceros bicornis, though the middle toe was sharper than a rhino’s, but the closest known rhino was 1000 miles away from the Congo.361 52 Heuvelmans believes there still may be an as-yet undiscovered and slightly smaller relative of the black rhino, Diceros bicornis. It could have developed elongated hooves due to the marshy wet-lands in the area.362 The strange thing to Ridel was that the tracks seemed to come from a bipedal creature, so if the trail was made by a dinosaur it wasn’t a sauropod or ceratopsian dinosaur.363 The tracks had not been there the day before.364 The tracks in question 365 The tracks could have been made by a bipedal dinosaur, something akin to an iguanodon, or a duck-billed dinosaur like a trachodont,366 but we will never know for certain what creature these prints belong to until we capture this animal and compare the feet to the print. I will admit that for me the thought of surviving dinosaurs has been the most entertaining aspect of cryptozoology. But the fact remains, there just isn’t any solid evidence…yet. There is far more anecdotal evidence and other for the existence of many other cryptids. There have been legitimate scientists such as Roy P. Mackal, Ivan T. Sanderson, and Bernard Heuvelmans, for example, who have investigated the idea. Sanderson was one of the first to bring the idea of surviving African dinosaurs to the forefront of cryptozoology. We have to keep in mind that whether or not these cryptids are dinosaurs, we will not know until we have an actual capture, or a reputable photo. They very well could be 53 something else entirerly, something completely new to zoology, an undiscovered mammal or a kind of long necked monitor lizard in the case of the Mokele-Mbembe. In the case of the Emela-Ntouka, we could have a new rhinoceros, or we can even theorize at the possibility of a large unknown horned reptile. Everything is up in the air for now. We cannot write anything off just yet, but as with most unknown creatures, once they are discovered the reality behind them is far less grandiose than their myth. The Congo is massive, as are many of the world’s jungles, so when one small underfunded and under-manned expedition party is surveying a particular area where one of these creatures had been sighted, the creature could have easily moved on already. If these creatures are real, they are not stationary. They feed and move on, unless they limit themselves to a specific area, and then it comes down to finding that area. There are many different possible variables to contend with and until the proper amount of funding, man power, and equipment is available everything we “known” about these creatures will be nothing more than guesswork. Sasquatch and Bigfoot 367 The Sasquatch or Bigfoot (both terms are plural and singular) is North America’s largest cryptozoological mystery.368 The name “Bigfoot” has come to denote any 54 unknown relic hominid that is reported throughout the world, though each unknown creature does have is own label,369 like the Yeti or Abominable Snowman in the Himalayas which is described as a creature smaller and less erect than Sasquatch, something likened to a “rock ape.” A few examples of the world’s relic hominids are: the five foot tall, dark brown and hairy shiru in the mountains of Ecuador, the “giant” mapinguary of the Mato Grosso of Brazil. This is a creature that leaves 20 inch tracks and kill cattle by tearing out their tongues,370 Sumatra is home to the Orang-Pendak a four foot tall “hairy man” that may be a new species of orangutan, Pongo pygmaeus.371 The name Bigfoot first appeared in the Humboldt Times of Northern California on October 5th, 1958 in a story written about a group of “church going” construction workers, who reported finding a series of large humanlike foot prints.372 The name Bigfoot, though a general term, is primarily used in the United States. The other, more reputable, term for the creature is Sasquatch. In the 1920s, Canadian Journalist J.W. Burns coined the term Sasquatch as a common denominator for all the various Native American names of unknown hominid creatures,373 Sasquatch derives from the word “sesquac.” This word is used in the Sto:lo dialect of the Halkomelem language of the Coast Salish Indians of the Fraser Valley and in parts of Vancouver Island.374 Names for the creature describe the creature’s behaviors such as shaking trees, eating preferences, etc. These names reinforce the impression that the natives are describing actual creatures, based upon their firsthand knowledge of the creatures’ habits.375 55 Native American accounts In the book The Klamath knot: Explorations of Myth and Evolution David Rains Wallace ponders the Native “wild man” tales and raises the question, What wild animal would be hardest to discover? An animal very much like us, perhaps. Certain Amazonian tribes were not found until long after their region was explored. Such wild animals couldn’t be too much like humans. If they were, they would betray their presence by competing for the same habitat. Could an animal be enough like us to escape our endless snooping, yet enough unlike us to escape our endless competitiveness? What if another hominid species had emotionally outgrown Homo sapiens had not evolved the greed, cruelty, vanity, and other ‘childishness’ that seems to arise with our neotenic nature? What if that animal had come to understand the world well enough that it didn’t need to construct a civilization, a cultural sieve through which to strain perception? Such a creature could understand forests in ways we cannot.376 The traditional Native American beliefs regarding Sasquatch are recognized by cultural anthropologists, but only for chronicling of folklore and mythologies of Native societies.377 The original inhabitants of North America were well aware of the Sasquatch.378 The Sasquatch appears in their ceremonies and art alongside animals known to the western world.379 The art and images depicting the Sasquatch have it looking (obviously) very apelike, which is interesting to point out because there are not supposed to be any apes in North America to base these likenesses upon.380 An example of this is the Tsimshian monkey mask from northern British Columbia.381 It was collected in the early 1900s it is now in the Peabody Museum at Harvard University. It is described as “a mythical being found in the woods and today called a monkey.”382 The mask has common anthropoid features, prominent brow, toothy grimace, projecting lower chinless lower face, and a flat upturned nose the only thing lacking are the protruding canine teeth, a feature at odds with extant great apes.383 Though the allegedly extinct Gigantopithecus a creature that some 56 “cryptozoologists” theorize may be a candidate for sasquatch has/had the lack of protruding canine teeth.384 The features found in the mask are also found in prehistoric carved stone heads from the Columbia River Gorge.385 Gigantopithecus 386 387 In Southern British Columbia the Kwakiutl tribe calls the “wild men” buk’wus.388 These buk’wus feature prominently in Kwakiutl artwork, particularly in carvings, masks, totems, etc. the female element of the buk’wus is distinguished separately and called the dsonoqua.389 Dsonoqua 390 57 A female who is described as “nocturnal, hair covered giantess, with large hanging breasts, and is fond of abducting children.”391 This is similar to the storie that lingered before the official discovery of the mountain gorilla, Gorilla beringei. These tales of kidnapping are similar to the stories of the bogeyman that serve to frighten misbehaving children.392 Other Native American tribes “wild men” are not quite as easy to point out since they haven’t been immortalized through masks or totems.393 Painted Rock, located on the Tule River Indian Reservation in the Sierra Nevada foothills of central California, is a rock shelter associated with a Native American Yokuts village.394 On this site are pictographs of bear, beaver, coyote, frog, caterpillar, centipede, eagle, lizard, condor, humans, and other designs. There is also the “Hairy Man.”395 The “Hairy Man” pictograph also known as mayak datat, or sunsunut, measures 2.6 meters high by 1.9 meters wide, and is a black, red and white representation of an eight and a half foot high two-legged “wild man” creature having what looks like long hair and huge eyes.396 The creature depicted is based upon a clever, nocturnal, bipedal animal that dwells in the forest.397 It’s reported to frequently steal acorn meal that has been left out to dry, with only its footprints left behind as evidence of its presence.398 “Hairy Man” 399 400 58 Native American people regard the Sasquatch with great respect. It is considered an extraordinary being because of his obvious relationship to humans, with some Native elders considering it to be on the border between animal and human.401 Tribal cultures all over are based on kinship the stronger the kinship the stronger the bond that exists between to parties involved.402 Indian elders will not eat bear meat because of its similarity to humans. Humans are (in some cases) beings that blend “natural knowledge” of animals with the consciousness of humans, giving them a special kind of intelligence. Sasquatch has this kind of intelligence.403 Anthropologist Jeff Meldrum has stated that in all his research of Northwestern tribes he has never heard of Sasquatch being anything other than a physical being, yet separated tribes such as the Hopi, Iroquois, Northern Athabascan, and the Sioux see the Sasquatch as a spirit being, something supernatural whose appearance is always meant to be a message.404 In 1938 it was shown just how real the Sasquatch is to the Natives and their culture. On May 23rd, during “Sasquatch Days,” held at Harrison Hot Springs, British Columbia,405 a prominent British Columbian official made an offensive slip during a speech stating, “Of course the Sasquatch are merely legendary Indian monsters. No white man has ever seen one and they do not exist today in fact….”406 He attempted to continue his talk, but was drowned out by two-thousand angry “red men.” Chief Flying Eagle rushed to the head of the podium surrounded by other dignitaries and “thundered in excellent english” “The white speaker is wrong! To all who now hear I say: Some white men have seen Sasquatch. Many Indians have seen them and spoken to them. Sasquatch are still here. I have spoken!”407 59 Roosevelt’s Story The following story is one that is often told and referred to in Sasquatch literature. It is an interesting story, which may be all that it is, but worth telling nonetheless. “Frontiersmen are not, as a rule, apt to be very superstitious. They lead lives too hard and practical, and have too little imagination in things supernatural.”408 Ivan T. Sanderson (1911-1973), one of the pioneers of cryptozoology and a man who ranks equally with Heuvelmans in the annuls of cryptozoology.409 Sanderson is author of the book Abominable Snowmen: Legend Come to Life which is considered the basis of all work done in the pursuit of relic hominids since its publication,410 Sanderson quoted a tale originally published in the book Wilderness Hunter, by Theodore Roosevelt. There is no date for the events, but this is believed to be one of the earlier stories to come out of the Northwest.411 Roosevelt wrote a story he was told by a man he referred to as a “grizzled, weatherbeaten old mountain hunter” named Bauman.412 Bauman was still young when this event happened.413 Bauman was trapping beaver with a partner in the Bitterroot, on the other side of the Rockies from Yosemite,414 between the forks of the Salmon River from the head of the Wisdom River.415 Bauman and his partner decided to head up an ominous pass, which had a “reputation for evil,” because another solitary trapper had previously been killed and half-eaten by an unknown beast.416 The story of the event did little to deter the two men from venturing into such an environment with potential for disaster.417 After making camp and with two hours of daylight left they went upstream to lay traps. They returned to find that their camp had been disturbed during their absence: 60 “Something, apparently a bear, had visited camp, and had rummaged about among their things, scattering the contents of their packs, and in sheer wantonness destroying their lean-to. The footprints of the beast were quite plain, but at first they paid no particular heed to them, busying themselves with rebuilding the leanto, laying out their beds and stores and lighting the fire.”418 Soon after Bauman’s partner began to examine the tracks. He followed them up along a game trail that the creature had used to leave the camp, after which he approached Bauman and remarked “Bauman, that bear has been walking on two legs!”419 After discussing whether or not the footprints were those of a human.420 At some point during the night Bauman was awakened by a noise and a strong “wild-beast odor” that was coming from a “great body in the darkness at the mouth of the lean-to.” He grabbed his rifle and fired into the darkness towards it, but apparently missed as he could hear the “beast” crashing through the wood in retreat.421 After this the men slept little and the next morning they went out to retrieve and replace the traps that they had set the previous day, neither leaving the others side via unspoken agreement.422 When they returned to camp they were astonished to find that the creature had returned to their campground, again, thrashing all of their belongings and destroying the lean-to.423 The men took turns watching as the other rested the following night and around midnight the “thing” came around behind them; they could hear it rumbling about, here and there, making odd and “sinister” drawn out sounds, though it didn’t venture near the fire.424 Around noon they were within a few miles of camp and with the high sun beating down on them they felt absurd to fear the “thing” the two gruff and armed men that they were.425 With three traps left to gather, Bauman volunteered to retrieve them while his partner went ahead to camp to ready their packs for departure. Bauman took several hours to finish, cleaning the beaver.426 When Bauman returned to the camp he found his 61 partner dead, with his neck broken and four large teeth marks in his neck.427 Roosevelt would later add that the large footprints scattered about told the whole story, the “monstrous assailant” snuck up silently from behind and attacked. It was waiting for the chance for the two men to be separated.428 The man’s body hadn’t been eaten, but it had been “romped and gamboled around it in uncouth and ferocious glee, occasionally rolling it over and over; it then fled back into the soundless depths of the woods.”429 Bauman unsurprisingly abandoned everything and headed down the pass on foot to where their two horses had been grazing, he mounted and rode through the day and night until he believed he was beyond the beasts pursuit.430 The Patterson-Gimlin film 431 432 In 1967 Roger Patterson put together a poor man’s expedition in the Bluff Creek area, north of Eureka, California after hearing reports of new “tracks” in the area.433 Patterson made the Journey with his friend/associate and outdoorsman Robert “Bob” Gimlin.434 Patterson rented a Kodak K200 16mm Cine camera for the trek and as the men were riding in Six Rivers National Forest on October 20, 1967 when early in the afternoon they rounded a bend, about twenty miles beyond the end of a dirt road that was “slashed through” for the use of logging trucks.435 62 The men were moving through dense underbrush when their horses were startled and tossed both men to the ground, Patterson jumped to his feet and went for the camera, because in front of them was a large, dark colored, upright creature walking away from them on one of the sandbars.436 Patterson managed to shoot several feet of film and later upon viewing the film they realized they had captured what appeared to be a female Sasquatch.437 She had glossy black hair that covered her entire body with large “pendulous breasts,” she was walking away from the camera and continued to look back at Patterson and Gimlin as they watched and filmed her.438 She didn’t appear to be frightened by the men at all, but seemed inquisitive,439 in an almost, “what are you looking at?” manner, wishing to avoid contact.440 “Experts” have said the creature looked to be around seven feet tall, with a weight estimation of 400 pounds.441 She left footprints that were seventeen inches long, and she had a stride of forty-one inches.442 The Sasquatch, disappeared into the woods, and the men pursued her for three miles, but lost her in the heavy undergrowth.443 Patterson and Gimlin returned to where they first spotted the Sasquatch and immediately began to cast footprints.444 Aftermath and findings of the Patterson-Gimlin film The response to the film was varied; scientists from various fields of expertise came forward to defend and discredit the footage. The curator of anthropology from Royal British Columbia Museum, Don Abbott, had previously examined the tracks of three supposed Sasquatch in the Bluff Creek area, regurgitated the feelings of many other scientists impressed with the film, but found it challenging to bury their preconceptions of such content. 63 It is about as hard to believe that the film is faked as it is to admit that such a creature really lives. If there’s a chance to follow up scientifically, my curiosity is built to the point where I’d want to go along with it. Like most scientists however, I’m not ready to put my reputation on the line until something concrete shows upsomething like bones or a sku1l.445 In 1969 Ken Peterson, a senior executive at Disney Studios examined the Patterson film and concluded to create something like it they would resorted to animation, if it was hoaxed it would have to be a man in a suit.446 One of the top men in the costume field at the time, Janos Prohaska had worked on numerous projects including the white gorillalike alien from the Star Trek episode “A Private Little War.” 447 Prohaska was convinced that it was a living creature in the film, as “you could see all the muscles on the body.” “It didn’t move like a costume at all.”448 He believed that if it was hoaxed the hair would have been strategically placed on the body, a make-up job which would’ve taken upwards of ten hours to complete.449 Dr. Dmitri Donskoy, chair of biomechanics at the USSR Central Institute of Physical Culture in Moscow, and Dr. Don Grieve, professor of biomechanics at London’s Royal Free Hospital of Medicine, studied the film. He derived that the feet were 13.3 inches long instead of 15 inches. My subjective impressions have oscillated between total acceptance of the Sasquatch on the grounds that it would be difficult to fake, to one of irrational rejection based on the emotional response to the possibility that the Sasquatch really exists. This seems worth stating because others have reacted similarly to the film.450 The analysis hinged on the frame speed of the film. If the Speed was 16 or 18 Frames per second the possibility of fakery is easily ruled out because under these conditions a 64 human couldn’t duplicate the pattern observed, suggesting that the Sasquatch possesses a different locomotor system that a human.451 Patterson claimed he would normally have the camera set at 24 frames per second, but after filming he noticed that it was set at 18, the instructions for the camera used state the actual speed of the camera will vary within 10 percent of the indicated speed setting.452 In a separate test it was found the conclusion was adequate and it was filming at a setting that would make it impossible for a human to fake.453 The degree of motion-blurring that is evident in the film footage points to a slower frame speed, vertical vacillations of the film frame correspond to the walking or running of Patterson as he was filming the creature.454 World-class splinters can manage five steps per second, so if the film speed was 24fps. Patterson would have made six steps per second to produce the vertical at 4-frame intervals, this isn’t possible.455 Dr. Grieve did believe it would be feasible for a well-practiced dancer to execute such a gait at 16-18 fps, but considered it highly improbable.456 The individual’s height can be determined by comparing its rate of step with a human of known height. Grover Krantz (1931-2002) used himself as a comparative biped at 6’ 5’’ and found the two-step stride required 1.15 if he was walking quickly and 1.3 if he was walking slowly.457 So if the film speed was 24 frames per second the subjects walking was less than one second per stride, which would be a very unnatural movement for someone of a similar height.458 There are a number of perspectives and assumed conclusions in regards to the film. Those who’ve investigated the film thoroughly have concluded for themselves that the film is “probably authentic.”459 On the other hand, those that immediately throw it aside as hogwash usually haven’t given all the available additional evidence a look.460 65 Footprints Animal tracks leave clues about numbers and behaviors.461 Dr. Jim Halfpenny stated that mammals are some of the most elusive animals on the planet, with a great deal of what is learned from them through stories that their tracks tell.462 It is important to understand that there is so much more evidence for the existence of Sasquatch than most people realize. We have eyewitness accounts, descriptions, drawings, plaster casts of their prints, and photographs (some more reliable than others). Dr. John Bindernagel believes that it’s the tracks that are depended on for the existence of an animal in a specific study area. In the case of Sasquatch it is the most compelling data.463 Sasquatch prints are flat with no indication of the characteristics of a human foot. They often have fixed longitudinal arches with little indication of weight bearing under a specialized “ball” at the base of the big toe. The feet are broader with a thicker sole pad, the heel and toe segments are larger than in human feet.464 Footprints on average are between 15 to 16 inches long and are superficially humanlike due to the large inner toe being aligned with the rest of the toes, where an ape’s inner toe diverges like a thumb.465 Characteristics that define primates are the presence of hairless friction skin on the palms of their hands and feet.466 Some Sasquatch prints display what appear to be dermal ridges and papillary ridges, along the skin ridges are the depressions that mark the openings of the sweat glands, under the right circumstances, soil and weather conditions permitting, the ridge detail can be transferred to the soil in a print.467 These details are most visible under the toe tips and forefoot.468 Dr. Grover Krantz was first to show the presence of these ridges with prints that were found in 1982 from the Blue Mountains of Washington. 66 Dermal Ridges 469 470 Jimmy Chilcutt, a crime scene investigator and former fingerprint examiner for the Conroe, Texas Police Department with experience in nonhuman dermatoglyphics has printed hundreds of primates for research centers and zoos across the country. He surveyed many different casts and found that some of the casts did display dermatoglyphic features, but unlike any he had seen in all of his years of experience.471 He found the ridges were on average twice as wide as a humans and where a human sole has ridges that run transversely across the width of the foot the ridges on the Sasquatch print lay parallel to the edge and run lengthwise across the axis of the foot. Chilcutt was impressed by what appeared to be healed scars on one pair of casts.472 Krantz has referred to these specific casts as “Wrinkle Foot” because of extensive coarse dermatoglyphics.473 Chilcutt stated “If this animal is walking through the wilderness, he’s bound to come across rock and rough terrain that will cut the bottom of his foot. As the wound heals, the ridges curl inward toward the scar.”474 These prints were found in mud helping to preserve the detail in them.475 Dr. Meldrum came across a cast that had been taken in Georgia, in 1997, by a police officer that was investigating a “disturbance” at a ranch, the cast had very noticeable and 67 detailed skin ridges.476 Chilcutt examined the casts and determined the dermal ridges at the stems of the second and fourth toes are definitely those of a nonhuman primate.477 This was concluded via the fact that humans have creases that run perpendicular to the lateral ridge on the first joint of the toes, where the toe meets the foot.478 The ridge flow is consistent with the 1967 prints found at Blue Creek Mountain and prints found in 1984 at Walla Walla, Table Springs.479 Ray Wallace and the “death of Bigfoot” Ray Wallace (1918-2002) and his construction company in Bluff Creek in 1958 It was an employee of his, Jerry Crew was the one to initially find the tracks that led to the coining of the term “Big Foot” beginning the Bigfoot phenomenon in the media.480 Throughout his life Wallace would be involved with many other stories in relation to Sasquatch, although in a joking sense. He began offering to sell a captured Sasquatch to Tom Slick, a Texas millionaire with an interest in cryptozoology, and regularly wrote letters to magazines about the whereabouts of Sasquatch proclaiming that he would eventually provide a captured creature. He even went so far as to proclaim that he knew for certain that the creature was a fan of Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes.481 Soon after Wallace’s death on November 26th, 2002 his family came forward to say that he had perpetrated the whole Bigfoot phenomenon and it was nothing more than a hoax.482 His family brought forward numerous wooden feet that he had manufactured and admitted the obvious: that he was a prankster. His obituary and one reporter’s interview with his “grieving” family set in motion a whirlwind of false information via “poorly written” stories proclaiming the death of Bigfoot began to pop up all across the country.483 68 The original story that was written by Bob Young of the Seattle Times was rewritten by other outlets across the country. It became a polluted mesh of nonsense and hearsay.484 The story that Bigfoot was dead traveled across the nation. This was not true by any means and is just another example of how the tabloid media misrepresents cryptozoology.485 Ray Wallace with Casts 486 69 Wallace casts compared to actual casts 487 Hair Sasquatch hair samples collected in California were examined by Dr. Sterling Bunnell a member of the California Academy of Sciences. He compared these using microscopy samples from Damnation Creek with; human, gorilla, Gorilla gorilla, chimp, Pan troglodytes, Pygathrix monkey hair, and orangutan, Pongo pygmaeus. It was distinguishable from all of these, but it seemed more like gorilla hair, than human hair.488 Ivan T. Sanderson submitted hair that was found in the Bluff Creek area to Dr. F. Martin Duncan, who was over the hair collection at the London Zoo. It too was tested, but didn’t match any of the hair samples on site. He determined it was from an unknown primate.489 In 1968 Sasquatch hair was collected in central Idaho and sent to Ray Pinker an instructor in police sciences at the California State College he had the same findings.490 None of 70 these findings will mean anything though until we have actual known Sasquatch hair that we can compare samples to.491 “The Skookum Cast:” 492 On September 22, 2000 a partial body imprint of what may have been made by a Sasquatch was discovered by the BFRO (Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization) during a field expedition in an area called Skookum Meadows.493 In the area that the body print was found a pheromone attractant that had been attached to a tree was missing as well as several pieces of fruit that were set out, some of the fruit fragments had large “shovelshaped” tooth marks.494 The impressions appeared to be of the left forearm, thigh, buttocks, and heels,495 however there were no Sasquatch footprints found in the surrounding area, as the immediate area was a halo of moist loamy soil and beyond that was dry and hard.496 Hair was recovered from the cast and given to molecular biologist Craig Newton of British Columbia Research for DNA analysis, who successfully extracted DNA, although it was fragmented. He attempted to utilize nuclear DNA 71 primers, but based upon the sequences he was unable to rule out human contamination, or even a possible human source.497 Where are the bones? The lack of Sasquatch Fossils in North America should not be surprising as weather conditions in the Pacific Northwest are not good for fossilization where moist coniferous forests, volcanic soils, and acidic forest soils contribute to this.498 Acid in the ground water creates caves in limestone sediment. The limestone stops some of the acidity allowing for preservation of bones in caves.499 These caves have lateral passages, used by bears, bats, etc. with vertical sinkholes, the vertical entrances are not conducive to bone preservation because of in-falling debris and water.500 Grover Krantz, as well as many others, including myself, has been asked at least once, “If there is a Bigfoot then why hasn’t anyone come across a dead one or the skeleton of one?”501 To this Krantz responds: Well if bears are real, then why don’t we find their bones? I’ve talked to hunters, many game guides, conservation people, ecology students, and asked them how many remains of dead bears have been found that died of a natural death? Over twenty years of enquiry my grand total of naturally dead bear bones found is zero! Now the best population estimate guess we can make is there are at least one hundred bears out there for every one Bigfoot, and we haven’t found the first bear yet. We would very much like to find the remains of a naturally dead Sasquatch, but the chance is just simply so remote it’s not even serious to think about it.502 World-renowned primatologist Dr. Jane Goodall has spoken openly about her conviction that additional species of great ape remain to be discovered.503 Goodall places a large amount of credence in the experiences and myths of Native Americans, and has stated bluntly, 72 Well now you’ll be amazed when I tell you that I am sure they (Sasquatch) exists…I have talked to so many Native Americans who’ve all described the same sounds; two who have seen them.504 There is so much information on the world’s relic hominids, particularly Sasquatch, too much to cover thoroughly in this thesis. There have been so many alleged sightings, including the photos, and footprints. The native myths and the histories alone are powerful form of anecdotal evidence. For me the question isn’t whether Sasquatch is real, but when we will we finally come across one, and do we really want to? The Mongolian Death Worm 505 The Gobi Desert encompasses half a million square miles and spans roughly a thousand miles across southeastern Mongolia and northern China stretching five hundred miles from north to south.506 It is home of a strange and reportedly dangerous cryptid, the Mongolian Death Worm.507 The indigenous people and nomadic tribesmen refer to it as allghoi khorkhoi508 which means “intestine worm”, due to its resemblance to cow intestines.509 This creature can spit corrosive venom, and kill with a touch in a manner that is suggestive of electrocution.510 Ivan Mackerle has investigated and sought the “worm” on three different occasions, in 1990, 1992, and 1996.511 Each time he and his team have 73 come back with anecdotal evidence. A translated information sheet on the creature, based upon his expeditions reads as follows: Sausage-like worm over half a metre [18 inches] long, and thick as a man’s arm, resembling the intestine of cattle. Its tail is short, as [if] it were cut off, but not tapered, it is difficult to tell its head from its tail because it has no visible eyes, nostrils, or mouth. Its colour is dark red, like blood or salami….It moves in odd ways-either it rolls around or it squirms sideways, sweeping its way about. It lives in desolate sand dunes and in the hot valleys of the Gobi desert with saxaul plants underground. It is possible to see it only during the hottest months of the year, June and July; later it burrows into the sand and sleeps. It gets out on [top of] the ground [i.e. sand] mainly after the rain, when the ground is wet. It is dangerous, because it can kill people instantly at a range of several metres.512 There is no physical evidence of the worm.513 The worm”may be nothing more than a product of folklore and superstition, yet for the purpose of cryptozoological analysis, let us assume that it is a real creature; anything that is known of the creature is nothing but hypothesis based upon the testimonies of the indigenous peoples.514 We must remember that the testimony of indigenous peoples has proven accurate in the past, time and time again when it comes to unknown animals. Is it a real, but harmless species whose death dealing ability is merely a product of native fear and folklore, or a species with the capacity of emitting highly toxic venom, or the ability to generate an electric discharge?515 Its featureless ends (no decipherable head or tail) and elongated body is like an Annelida, or segmented worm, as is its tendency to come to the surface after rain.516 If it is a segmented earthworm with the ability to squirt venom, it must be able to sense the individuals coming, or locate them via vibration because earthworms do not have any eyes. The sensitivity of earthworms in this regard is well known.517 74 The large size of the worm isn’t out of question as Megascolides australis, an earthworm found in Australia, can grow to thirteen feet.518 South Africa has the Microchaetus, one specimen was collected that measured twenty-two feet long.519 A species of worm Didymogaster sylvaticus from New South Wales does defend itself by squirting fluid at distances of eighteen inches out of small pores that surround its body.520 The United States has the elusive Palouse earthworm.521 It smells like lilies when handled. There have been specimens found that are three feet long. It inhabits the soils of the Palouse, a two-million-acre wheat field near the Idaho-Washington border, but there have only been a handful of sightings. It was common in the 1890s before the areas it inhabited turned to agriculture.522 There have been a few documented discoveries of the worm; 1978, 1988, 1990, and in 2005.523 It was considered extinct until 2005 when one was accidentally dug up by a student collecting soil samples; it is currently the only specimen in human hands.524 The specimen is six inches long.525 Palouse Earthworm 526 In regards to the Death worm’s ability to spit a deadly toxin or acid, Mackerle suggests that it may obtain its venom from the poisonous roots of the saxaul or from the roots of the goyo plant, which the “worm” is “associated with.”527 There are many 75 different poisonous species that obtain their toxins from external sources; Brazil’s Green poison-dart frog, Dendrobates auratus, or the Strawberry poison-dart frog, Dendrobates pumilio, are perfect examples of this.528 Regardless, if this creature did in fact discharge a toxin, it is still a mystery how it could be instantly fatal.529 It sounds more like the worm’s fatal reputation may have some merit, as the toxin it projects may indeed be toxic to an extent, but because of its large size the worms spitting ability is very dramatic, thus attaching more threat to it than is necessary.530 The indigenous people know nothing of the worm’s diet, but this may substantiate the possibility of it being a worm like earthworms it may have a small mouth and simply feed upon decaying organic matter.531 The environment of the Gobi Desert is the direct opposite of the preferred domain of known earthworms; an earthworm placed in an arid environment will quickly die.532 The worm’s activities, particularly its habit of only surfacing during the hottest months, is out of character for an earthworm.533 This worm could have evolved so it could thrive in such an environment.534 Some earthworms live in dry soil and avoid excessive water loss with the development of excretory organs (eteronephric nephridia).535 This allows certain worms to pass their urine through their digestive system, instead of releasing it, allowing for most of the water to be reabsorbed.536 With the help of evolution this could perhaps allow a worm to sustain itself in a desert environment.537 Dr. Karl Shuker believes it may be a kind of Amphisbaenian.538 An Amphisbaenian’s skull is reinforced with bone and is very blunt, to facilitate an exclusively fossorial existence, which requires little use of their eyes.539 Its tail looks exactly like its head, it waves its tail while at the surface to fool predators into attacking its tail, which can be shed in some species, it is often mistaken that this reptile has a head at each end.540 76 Amphisbaenid 541 Amphisbaenians are found in tropical and subtropical regions including arid regions where their scaly skin is better able to resist water loss than the smooth skin of an earthworm.542 Many, including some cryptozoologists are quick to dismiss the worm as nonsense.543 There is nothing like the Death Worm that has been documented paleontologically,544 but that doesn’t mean that we should count out the possibility of some unknown creature being the culprit for the worm’s identity. Why Cryptozoology should be legitimized and can it? Cryptozoology is a hard science, hard not in its factuality, but in the difficulty of categorizing it as a science. Cryptozoology will need to be a sub-genre of zoology. It would take a lifetime to obtain what could be considered the “appropriate” credentials to research cryptozoology with any “authority” as cryptozoology, like many other sciences requires many differing fields of expertise. If such a degree existed it would require knowledge of not just zoology, but ichthyology, paleontology, botany, geology, anthropology, social anthropology, even psychology. Cryptozoology and the animals 77 therein are intensely controversial and cryptozoologists come down on both sides of the debates on which animals (cryptids) coexist with us on this planet.545 Many of the cryptozoological mysteries are solvable, but what we require to do so are real open mindedness, actual expertise, commitment, and unfortunately most important of all sufficient funding,546 however before cryptozoology can hope to attain this it first must gain the acknowledgement of traditional science. How can it do this? It must prove the existence of a well known cryptid. Unfortunately, we are forced to come full circle regarding the solvability and the requirements listed above. Many of the leading cryptozoologists have varying fields of expertise, for example, Eugenie Clark, “Shark Lady,” is educated in zoology,547 Loren Coleman anthropology, zoology, with a masters in social psychology,548 Heuvelmans Zoology,549 Roy Mackal bio-chemistry,550 Jeffrey Meldrum physical anthropology,551 Karl Shuker zoology and comparative physiology,552 Grover Krantz anthropology.553 William Gibbons religious studies, incidentally his main interest is surviving dinosaurs with the intent to prove the evangelical “young Earth theory.”554 If cryptozoology does become a respected science it must literally be a science of cooperation where experts in varying fields come together and supply their varying expertise. The pros versus the cons Still the question remains, why should cryptozoology be legitimized? Does cryptozoology matter? In 2001 primatologist Richard Leakey warned an audience in South African that the Earth’s plant, animal, and insect species were dying off at a rate of fifty thousand to a hundred thousand a year.555 Species disappear due to natural selection, 78 but just as many are threatened by the actions of man. There are many today that accept the fact that many species have gone extinct before we even knew that they existed.556 There are two reasons for the legitimization of cryptozoology: first, for the sake of curiosity, second to find these species so we may protect them before they are gone, (the urgency of this grows with rarer species).557 What if for instance the Mokele-Mbembe were authentic and we failed to locate it, and if for whatever reason it be deforestation, pollution, or something else. Its small population died off due to an action that could have been prevented if we had known for certain it was real? Some of the cryptids may hold keys to human ancestry. 558 “It is easier to prevent [extinction] than to cure it.”559 On the same note, the legitimization of cryptozoology may be a double-edged sword. If we open up the world of cryptozoology to legitimacy and we discover some of the more infamous creatures (Sasquatch for instance), it could put many of these creatures in danger. In the case of Sasquatch the question of whether to kill to prove they exist is a heated topic among cryptozoologists. John Green makes the point there are no Sasquatch available for study, unlike other known apes, there isn’t any definitive information on Sasquatch.560 There are enough known apes in captivity that if more cadavers are needed one would need to only wait for a natural death, but with Sasquatch, or any other relic hominid they would definitely be hunted for scientific study.561 Green believes one must be presented “in the flesh” for scientific study so that it can be established to exist and until that is done there will be no possibility of having them studied effectively.562 He also believes that the capture/death of one must be done so that we may protect their habitat, to protect these areas from being destroyed.563 Take Florida, home of the Myakka Skunk Ape. It is extremely difficult to prevent developers from infringing on 79 wild areas on behalf of any animal.564 Green also believes they should be captured and confined to zoos.565 However, what is most offensive is Green’s belief that if the existence of Sasquatch was established and we were able to capture and breed them, they should be utilized for the benefit of humans thus replacing primates in medical research for vivisection. Because they stand and walk erect like humans, thus are more likely to have more genetically in common with humans than primates.566 Grover Krantz also follows the kill-to-prove-the-existence mentality.567 On the topic of killing Loren Coleman calls Green and Krantz “gun-toting” and is against killing to prove the existence of Sasquatch.568 Many “cryptozoologists” follow this no-kill policy, Dmitri Bayanov and George Haas for example.569 Coleman states the world is not as “simple” as it was during the 18th and 19th centuries when seeking out the unknown animals of the world meant going out and shooting them.570 Today’s technology makes that kind of barbaric practice obsolete. He hopes that if Sasquatch is found that at most, it is tranquilized, brought in, studied, given some rights, preferably put on the endangered species list, and then released.571 I am staunchly against the killing of any animal, especially a creature as rare as a cryptid. When I began writing this thesis my intention was to legitimize cryptozoology: to bring it out of the shadow of “tabloid media” and the criticism it faces from respected science. But now after thinking about why I would want to legitimize it, I wonder why am I interested in cryptozoology? I now realize my place in all of this was at first a selfish one. I would be lying if I said that I haven’t dreamed about being the one to prove that one of these infamous creatures was a reality, to vindicate myself in the eyes of all of the many people, professors, peers, I have defended my interests, my life’s ambitions. I 80 also aspired to be scientifically involved in the search and discovery of something that was zoologically mind-blowing. I now realize that my mentality was wrong. I am now of the firm belief that all cryptids should be left alone. Once they are revealed to the public, they will be put in danger of being hunted by the sport hunters; even if they are protected by endangered species laws they would still be poached. I would rather see cryptozoology stay on the fringe, never respected, always the butt of the joke, than come to the forefront and put these rare and wonderful creatures in danger. Bernard Heuvelmans, “the father of cryptozoology” said it best: I have a vague sense of regret-regret that I have revealed the still-undisturbed retreat of so many unknown animals. When I think of what man has done with a rifle, I am horrified that I should offer new targets. The most dreadful of the monsters I have mentioned attacks man in self-defense or to provide himself with food. Only man kills for pleasure. No sooner is a new animal discovered than the hunt for trophies begins. These maniacs must be stopped at once. History shows how alarmingly quickly man can exterminate a whole species……..Tomorrow we may know one of our other relatives: the Abominable Snowman, for instance, who is surely a shy and gentle great ape; or perhaps an even more human primate like the tiny Agogwe or the elusive Orang Pendek. I hope with all my heart that when he is captured there will be no needless murder. Have pity on them all, for it is we who are the real monsters.572 81 End Notes 1 Bernard Heuvelmans, “What Is Cryptozoology?”, Cryptozoology: Interdisciplinary Journal Of the International Society Of Cryptozoology Volume #1, Winter (1982): pg 1-2. 2 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume #1, pg 1.) 3 Ibid. 4 Loren Coleman, Bernard Heuvelmans (1916-2001), Cyptomundo: The Cryptozoologist, mhtml:file://I:\Bernard Heuvelmans Obituary.mht Internet, Retrieved 07/15/09. 5 Ibid. 6 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume #1, pg 2.) 7 Loren Coleman, Cryptozoology A to Z: The Encyclopedia Of Loch Monsters, Sasquatch, Chupacabras And Other Authentic Mysteries Of Nature (New York: Fireside, 1999), pg 75. 8 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia of Cryptozoology pg 4.) 9 Karl P.N. Shuker, Ph.D., The Beasts That Hide From Man (New York: Paraview Press, 2003), pg 182. 10 Ibid. 11 Tzuchinoko picture www.pinktentacle.com/images/Tsuchinoko_2.jpg Internet, Retrieved 06/28/09. 12 Dr. P. N. Shuker, “Nessie You Are Not Alone: Beyond Travels In The Wake Of North American Sea Monsters”, Beyond, March 2008, Issue 14, pg 38. 13 Dr. Karl P.N. Shuker, In Search Of Prehistoric Survivors: Do Giant ‘Extinct’ Creatures Still Exist (United Kingdom: Blandford, 1995), pg 37. 14 (Beyond Magazine Issue 14 pg 38.) 15 Ibid. 16 Ibid. 17 Hellbender photo http://Channel.nationalgeographic.com/Staticfiles/NG Internet, Retrieved 07/14/09. 18 Bernard Heuvelmans, “The Birth And Early History Of Cryptozoology”, Cryptozoology: Interdisciplinary Journal Of The International Society Of Cryptozoology Volume #3, (1984): pg 1. 19 Ibid. 20 Ibid. 21 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 2.) 22 Ibid. 23 Ibid. 24 Ibid. 25 Ibid. 26 Ibid. 27 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 3.) 28 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 4.) 29 (Cryptozoology A-Z pg 16 Coleman.) 30 Bernard Heuvelmans (Abridged Edition), On The Track Of Unknown Animals (New York: Hill and Wang, 1962), pg 9. 31 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 4.) 32 Ibid. 33 Ibid. 34 Ibid. 35 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 5.) 36 Ibid. 37 Ibid. 38 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 6.) 39 Ibid. 40 Ibid. 41 Ibid. 42 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 7.) 43 Ibid. 44 Ibid. 45 Ibid. 82 46 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 3 pg 10.) Ibid. 48 Dmitri Bayanov, “Why Cryptozoology?”, Cryptozoology: Interdisciplinary Journal Of The International Society Of Cryptozoology Volume #6 (1987): pg 2. 49 Ibid. 50 Ibid. 51 Ibid. 52 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 2.) 53 Ibid. 54 Ibid. 55 Ibid. 56 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 3.) 57 Ibid. 58 Ibid. 59 Ibid. 60 Ibid. 61 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 4.) 62 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 5.) 63 Ibid. 64 Ibid. 65 Oxford Pocket American Dictionary of Current English, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002), pg 719-720. 66 Dmitri Bayanov, “Why Cryptozoology?”, Cryptozoology: Interdisciplinary Journal Of The International Society Of Cryptozoology Volume 6, (1989) pg 4. 67 Ibid. 68 Ibid. 69 Ibid. 70 Ibid. 71 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 5-6.) 72 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 6.) 73 Ibid. 74 Ibid. 75 Ibid. 76 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 6-7.) 77 Ibid. 78 Paul Feyerabend, Against Method (New York: Verso, 2000), pg 11. 79 (Feyerabend: Against Method pg 12.) 80 Ibid. 81 Ibid. 82 Ibid. 83 Ibid. 84 (Feyerabend: Against Method pg 14.) 85 Ibid. 86 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 8.) 87 Ibid. 88 (Cryptozoology Journal 1Volume pg 9.) 89 Ibid. 90 Ibid. 91 Ibid. 92 Ibid. 93 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 10.) 94 Ibid. 95 Ibid. 96 Ibid. 97 Ibid. 47 83 98 Ibid. Ibid. 100 Ibid. 101 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 11.) 102 (Cryptozoology A-Z pg 18.) 103 Ibid. 104 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 1.) 105 Ibid. 106 Ibid. 107 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 1-2.) 108 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 2.) 109 Ibid. 110 Ibid. 111 Gerardo Ceballos, Paul R. Ehrlich, Discoveries Of New Mammal Species And Their Implications For Conservation And Ecosystem Services, www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0812419106 , Internet, retrieved 05/13/09. 112 Ibid. 113 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 2.) 114 Ibid. 115 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 2-3.) 116 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 3.) 117 Ibid. 118 Ibid. 119 Ibid. 120 Ibid. 121 Ibid. 122 Ibid. 123 Ibid. 124 Ibid. 125 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 4.) 126 Ibid. 127 David C. Guynn, Jr., Rober L. Downing, George R Askew, “Estimating The Probability Of NonDetection Of Low Density Populations”, Cryptozoology: Interdisciplinary Journal Of The International Society Of Cryptozoology, Volume 4 (1885) pg 55. 128 Ibid. 129 Ibid. 130 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 4 pg 56.) 131 Ibid. 132 Ibid. 133 Ibid. 134 Ibid. 135 Ibid. 136 Ibid. 137 Ibid. 138 Ibid. 139 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 4 pg 57.) 140 Ibid. 141 Ibid. 142 Ibid. 143 Loren Coleman, Elephant In The Woods, http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptozoo-news/charlie/ , Internet, retrieved 07/15/09. 144 Ibid. 145 Peter F. Brussard, “The Likelihood Of Persistence Of Small Populations Of Large Animals And Its Implications For Cryptozoology”, Cryptozoology: The Interdisciplinary Journal of the International Society of Cryptozoology, Volume 5 (1986) pg 38. 99 84 146 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 5 pg 38-39.) (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 5 pg 39.) 148 Ibid. 149 Ibid. 150 Ibid. 151 Ibid. 152 Ibid. 153 Ibid. 154 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 5 pg 40.) 155 Ibid. 156 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 5 pg 41.) 157 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 5 pg 42.) 158 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 5 pg 44.) 159 Christine Janis, “Fossil Ungulate Mammals Depicted On Archeological Artifacts”, Cryptozoology: The Interdisciplinary Journal Of The International Society Of Cryptozoology, Volume 6 (1987) pg 5. 160 Ibid. 161 Ibid. 162 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 6 pg 6.) 163 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 1 pg 7.) 164 Ibid. 165 Micheal Newton, Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology: A Global Guide (North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., 2005), pg 5. 166 Ibid. 167 Ibid. 168 (Ceballos, Ehrlich) Internet 169 Ibid. 170 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2 pg 4.) 171 Ibid. 172 Ibid. 173 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2 pg 12.) 174 Ibid. 175 Ibid. 176 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2 pg 4-5.) 177 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2 pg 5.) 178 Ibid. 179 Jeff Meldrum, Sasquatch: Legend Meets Science (New York: Forge, 2006), pg 44. 180 Ibid. 181 (Meldrum, pg 44—45.) 182 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2 pg 163.) 183 Ibid . 184 Ibid . 185 Ibid. 186 Ibid. 187 (Meldrum pg 45.) 188 Ibid. 189 Ibid. 190 Aardvark Picture, www.sheppardsoftware.com/images/Africa/tac Internet, Retrieved 06/24/09. 191 David Burnie, Don E. Wilson, Smithsonian Institution: Animal (New York: DK Publishing, 2005), pg 222. 192 Dr. Karl P.N. Shuker, Extraordinary Animals Revisited (Great Britain: CFZ Press, 2007), pg 17. 193 (Shuker, Extraordinary Animals pg 18.) 194 Ibid. 195 Ibid. 196 Gorilla Picture, www.dutchmills.nl/rwanda-gorillas/assets/imag... Internet, Retrieved 06/24/09. 197 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of pg 21.) 147 85 198 Ibid. (Coleman: Cryptozoology A-Z pg 173.) 200 A.F. Dixson, Natural History Of The Gorilla (New York: Columbia University Press, 1981) pg 1. 201 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of pg 12.) 202 (Coleman Cryptozoology A-Z pg 173.) 203 Ibid. 204 Ibid. 205 (Meldrum: Sasquatch, pg 43.) 206 Ibid. 207 John Roach, Elusive African Apes: Giant Chimps Or New Species?, http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/pf/91509069.html Internet, Retrieved08/03/09. 208 Ibid. 209 (Meldrum: Sasquatch, pg 44.) 210 Omaha Zoo Testing DNA Of Mystery Apes, http://usatoday.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=USATODAY.com-+Om Internet, Retrieved 08/03/09. 211 Ibid. 212 Stephan Faris, Lost Apes Of The Congo, http://www.time.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816,1015856,00.html Internet, Retrieved 08/03/09. 213 Bondo/Bili www.ceticsmoaberto.com/imagens3/bondo01..... Internet, Retrieved 08/01/09. 214 Bondo/Bili Dead http://hr.aids.zip.net/images.Bondo_Monkey.jpg Internet, Retrieved 08/01/09. 215 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology pg 150.) 216 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology pg 506.) 217 Ibid. 218 Komodo Dragon Picture www.komodo-liveboards.com/images/komodo Internet, Retrieved 06/24/09. 219 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of pg 26.) 220 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A-Z pg 124.) 221 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of pg 27.) 222 Okapi Picture http://mnsbcmedia3.msn.com/j/ap/af76doc7-ed7e-4a Internet, Retrieved 06/24/09. 223 Susan Lyndaker Lindsey, Mary Neel Green, Cynthia L. Bennett, The Okapi: Mystery Of Congo-Zaire (Texas: Univesity of Texas Press, 1999), pg 2. 224 (Lindsay, Green, Bennet: The Okapi pg 4.) 225 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A to Z pg 184.) 226 (Lindsay, Green, Bennett: Okapi pg 5.) 227 Ibid. 228 Ibid. 229 Ibid. 230 (Lindsay, Green, Bennett: Okapi pg 6.) 231 Ibid. 232 Ibid. 233 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A-Z pg 185.) 234 Giant Panda photo http://witsaboutme.file.wordpress.com2009/02/gie Internet, Retrieved 06/24/09. 235 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of pg 16.) 236 Ibid. 237 Ibid. 238 Ibid. 239 Ibid. 240 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of pg 29.) 241 Ibid. 242 Saola Picture www.ultimateungulate/Images/pseudoryx Internet, Retrieved 06/24/09. 243 (Coelman: Cryptozoology A- Z pg 214.) 244 Ibid. 245 Ibid. 246 Ibid. 247 Coelacanth Picture http://panaechereport.com/.../images/coelacanth_3.jpg Internet, Retrieved 08/02/09. 199 86 248 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 8 pg 4.) Ibid. 250 Ibid. 251 Squid Photo http://squid.us/wp-content/uploads/colossal_squid_c... Internet, Retrieved 06/28/09. 252 Squid photo with man http://scienceblogs.com/.../2007/02/colossal_squid1.jpg Internet, 06/28/09. 253 Squid Chart photo www.worsleyschool.net/.../thegiant/diagram.gif Internet, Retrieved 06/28/09. 254 Oberon Zell-Ravenheart And Ash “leapardDancer” Dekirk, A Wizards Bestiary (New Jersey: New Page Books, 2007), pg 188. 255 “Monsters of the deep”, Science Illustrated, May/June 2009, pg 36. 256 Homer, The Odyssey (Michigan: J.W. Edwards, Inc. Borders Classics, 2008), pg 141. 257 Ibid. 258 (Ravenheart: A Wizards Bestiary pg 189.) 259 Jon Bennett,“Where In The World: Rediscovered Creatures” Issue 10, Novenber 2007, Beyond issue 10, pg 66. 260 (Science Illustrated pg 36.) 261 (Beyond, Issue 10 pg 66.) 262 Ibid. 263 Ibid. 264 Ibid. 265 Robin McDowell, Indonesia: New Orangutan Population Found, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/04/12/indonesia-new-orangutan-_n_185978.html Internet, Retrieved 06/19/09. 266 Alister Doyle, Jurassic “Shrimp” Alive And Well, http://www.abc.net.au/cgibin/common/printfriendly.pl?/science/news/stories/2006/180855 Internet, Retrieved 06/10/09. 267 Jurassic Shrimp picture http://dynimg.rte.ie/0000b2cd096.jpg Internet, Retrieved 06/28/09. 268 (Karl Shuker: Extraordinary Animals, pg 253.) 269 (Karl Shuker: Extraordinary Animals, pg 25.) 270 Ibid. 271 Ibid. 272 Ibid. 273 Ibid. 274 Ibid. 275 Ibid. 276 Ibid. 277 (Ravenheart: Wizards Bestiary pg 53.) 278 (Ravenheart: Wizards Bestiary pg 41.) 279 (Shuker: Extraordinary Animals pg 49.) 280 Dr. Karl P. N. Shuker “This Jokes Going To Run And Run: How The World Was Fooled By Animal Fakes And Frauds”, Beyond Issue 11, November 2007, pg 21. 281 Ibid. 282 Ibid. 283 Ibid. 284 De Loys Ape www.bigfootencounters.com/images/de%20Lo Internet, Retrieved 06/16/09. 285 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 128.) 286 Ibid. 287 (Dr. Karl P.N. Shuker: Extraordinary Animals pg 54.) 288 Ibid. 289 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology pg 128.) 290 (Dr. Karl P.N. Shuker: Extraordinary Animals pg 61.) 291 (Dr. Karl P.N. Shuker: Extraordinary Animals pg 62.) 292 Jesse McKinleyTwo Georgians Say They Have Bigfoot’s Body, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/15/us/15bigfoot.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print Internet Retrieved 06/22/09. 293 Ibid. 249 87 294 Biggest story of 2008: The Georgia Body Hoax, http://www/bfro.net/hoax.asp Internet, Retrieved 06/22/09. 295 Big foot Hoax Photo, http://skinnymoose.com/heroutdoor/wp-content/up/upl Internet, Retrieved 06/22/09. 296 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of, pg 34.) 297 Ibid. 298 Ibid. 299 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of, pg 35.) 300 Ibid. 301 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of, pg 36.) 302 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of, pg 37.) 303 Ibid. 304 (Heuvelmans: On The Track Of, pg 38.) 305 Dr. Roy P. Mackal, A Living Dinosaur? In Search Of Mokele-Mbembe (New York: E.J. Brill, 1987), pg.2. 306 Lake Tele Photo www.wes-congo.org/.../03lactele/index.html Internet, Retrieved 07/15/09. 307 Mokele-Mbembe Picture With Pygmy www.occultopedia.com/images_/mokele_1.jpg Internet, Retrieved 07/15/09. 308 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 224.) 309 Ibid. 310 Ibid. 311 Ibid. 312 Ibid. 313 (Shuker: Prehistoric Survivors, pg 18.) 314 Ibid. 315 Ibid. 316 Ibid. 317 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 10.) 318 Ibid. 319 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 12.) 320 Ibid. 321 Ibid. 322 Emela-Ntouka Picture www.reyastrol.com/CAP-1/1-BACKGROUNDS/0 Internet, Retrieved 07/15/09. 323 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 235.) 324 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 236.) 325 Ibid. 326 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 237.) 327 Ibid. 328 Ibid. 329 Ibid. 330 Ibid. 331 Ibid. 332 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 238.) 333 (Shuker: Prehistoric Survivors, pg 18.) 334 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 250.) 335 Shuker: Prehistoric Survivors, pg 30.) 336 Shuker: Prehistoric Surviviors, pg 30.) 337 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2, pg 107.) 338 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 267.) 339 Ibid. 340 Ibid. 341 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 273.) 342 Ibid. 343 Ibid. 344 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2, pg 105.) 88 345 (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2, pg 109.) (Cryptozoology Journal Volume 2, pg 110.) 347 Ibid. 348 Ibid. 349 Ibid. 350 Ibid. 351 (Shuker: Prehistoric Survivors, pg 33.) 352 Ibid. 353 Ibid. 354 Ibid. 355 Ibid. 356 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 316.) 357 Ibid. 358 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 319.) 359 Ibid. 360 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 316.) 361 Ibid. 362 Ibid. 363 Ibid. 364 Ibid. 365 Dino Footprint Photo http://livingdinos.com/mypictures/Iguanadon.jpg Internet, Retrieved 07/15/09. 366 (Mackal: A Living Dinosaur, pg 317.) 367 Sasquatch Picture http://ghostradio.fileswordpress/2009 Internet, Retrieved 08/05/09. 368 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A - Z pg 39.) 369 Ibid. 370 John Green, Saquatch:The Apes Among Us (Seatle: Hancock House, 1978), pg 132. 371 Karl P.N. Shuker, “The Futures Orang…”, Paranormal, November 2008, Issue 29, pg 30-35. 372 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A - Z pg 39-40.) 373 (Meldrum: pg 50.) 374 Ibid. 375 Ibid. 376 (Meldrum: pg 74.) 377 (Meldrum: pg 49.) 378 Ibid. 379 Ibid. 380 Ibid. 381 Ibid. 382 Ibid. 383 Ibid. 384 Ibid. 385 Ibid. 386 Gigantopithecus, http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-uGuNzzzjo7E/5JARH_yu7 …. Internet, Retrieved 07/14/09. 387 Gigantopithecus, http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_RbskRuN13NE.5ZIg362gx.... Internet, Retrieved 07/14/09. 388 (Meldrum: Sasquatch, pg 75.) 389 Ibid. 390 Sasquatch Totem Photo http://k53.pbase.com/g6/39/6111339/2/87146710.N3... Internet, Retrieved 07/24/09. 391 Ibid. 392 (Meldrum: pg 76.) 393 (Meldrum: pg 79.) 394 Ibid. 395 Ibid. 396 (Meldrum: pg 80.) 397 Ibid. 398 Ibid. 346 89 399 Hairy Man Photo www.bigfootproject.org/…/moskowitz%20/fig6.jpg Internet, Retrieved 07/24/09. Hairy Man Drawing www.bfro.net/leiterman/image1.jpg Internet, Retrieved 07/24/09. 401 (Meldrum: pg 82.) 402 Ibid. 403 (Meldrum: pg 82.) 404 Ibid. 405 Loren Coleman, Bigfoot: The True Story Of Apes In America (New York: Paraview Pocket Books, 2003), pg 32. 406 (Coleman: Bigfoot, pg 33.) 407 Ibid. 408 John Green, The Best Of Sasquatch Bigfoot (Washington: Hancock House, 2004), pg 92. 409 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A - Z, pg 211.) 410 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A - Z, pg 212.) 411 (Green The Best Of, pg 92.) 412 Ibid. 413 Ibid. 414 (Coleman: Bigfoot, pg 180.) 415 (Green: The Best Ff, pg 92.) 416 Ibid. 417 Ibid. 418 Ibid. 419 Ibid. 420 Ibid. 421 (Green: The Best Of, pg 92-93.) 422 (Green: The Best Of, pg 93.) 423 Ibid. 424 Ibid. 425 Ibid. 426 Ibid. 427 (Coleman: Bigfoot, pg 181.) 428 Ibid. 429 Ibid. 430 (Green: The Best Of, pg 94.) 431 Patterson Film Photo Walking http://beeryetifiles.wordpress.com/2008/12/sasquat..... Internet, Retrieved 07/14/09. 432 Patterson Film Photo Walking Away http://runningwitht1.files.wordpress.com/2009/06/bi.... Internet, Retrieved 07/14/09. 433 (Coleman : Bigfoot, pg 81-82.) 434 (Coleman: Bigfoot, pg 82.) 435 Brad Steiger, Out Of The Dark: The Complete Guide To Beings From Beyond (New York: Kensington Books, 2001), pg 54. 436 (Coleman: Bigfoot, pg 82.) 437 (Stieger: Out Of The Dark, pg 55.) 438 Ibid. 439 Ibid. 440 Ibid. 441 Ibid. 442 Ibid. 443 (Coleman: Big foot, pg 83.) 444 Ibid. 445 (Meldrum: pg 149.) 446 (Meldrum: pg 157.) 447 Ibid. 448 Ibid. 449 (Meldrum: pg 158.) 400 90 450 Ibid. Ibid. 452 Ibid. 453 (Meldrum: pg 159.) 454 Ibid. 455 Ibid. 456 (Meldrum: pg 160.) 457 Ibid. 458 Ibid. 459 (Meldrum: pg 178.) 460 Ibid. 461 (Meldrum: pg 222.) 462 Ibid. 463 (Meldrum: pg 222.) 464 (Meldrum: pg 223.) 465 Ibid. 466 (Meldrum: pg 249.) 467 (Meldrum: pg 249-250.) 468 (Meldrum: pg 250.) 469 Dermal Ridge, Example #1, home.clara.net/rtfthomas/papers/images/derm Internet, retrieved 07/31/09. 470 Dermal Ridge Close-Up, www.sasquatchresearch.net/sitebuilder/images/.... Internet, retrieved 07/31/09. 471 (Meldrum: pg 254.) 472 (Meldrum: pg 255.) 473 Ibid. 474 Ibid. 475 Ibid. 476 Ibid. 477 (Meldrum: pg 258.) 478 Ibid. 479 Ibid. 480 Loren Coleman, Raymond L. Wallace, 84 Bigfoot Story Teller (1918-2002), http://mhtml:file://I:\RaymondWallaceObituary.mht Internet, Retrieved 07/15/09. 481 Ibid. 482 Loren Coleman, Is Bigfoot Really Dead?, http://mhtml:file://I:\IsBigfootReallyDead.mht Internet, Retrieved, 07/15/09. 483 Ibid. 484 Ibid. 485 Ibid. 486 Ray Wallace With Tracks, www.cryptomundo.com/wp-content/uploads/w, Internet, Retrieved 07/31/09. 487 Wallace Footprint Comparisons, www.bigootencounters.com/images/billmiller.... Internet, Retrieved 07/31/09. 488 (Meldrum: pg 262.) 489 Ibid. 490 Ibid. 491 Ibid. 492 Skookum Cast, www.bfro.net/NEWS/bodycast/images/clean_c... Internet, retrieved 07/31/09. 493 (Meldrum: Sasquatch, pg 112.) 494 (Meldrum: pg 113.) 495 Ibid. 496 Ibid. 497 (Meldrum: pg 266-267.) 498 (Meldrum: pg 103.) 499 Ibid. 500 Ibid. 501 (Coleman: Pg 236.) 451 91 502 Ibid. (Coleman: pg 87.) 504 Ibid. 505 Mongolian Death Worm, www.virtuescience.com/mongolian-death-wor... Internet, Retrieved 07/31/09. 506 Dr. Karl P. N. Shuker, The Beasts That Hide From Man: Seeking The World’s Last Undiscovered Animals (New York: Paraview Press, 2003), pg 27-28. 507 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 21-22.) 508 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 21.) 509 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 26.) 510 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 24.) 511 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 28, 29, 30.) 512 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 26.) 513 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 46.) 514 Ibid. 515 Ibid. 516 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 47.) 517 Ibid. 518 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 48.) 519 Ibid. 520 Ibid. 521 Tom Leonard, Conservationists Hunt Elusive US Earthworm, http://mhtml:file//I:\ConservationistshuntelusiveUSearthworm-Telegraph.mht Internet, Retrieved 07/30/09. 522 Ibid. 523 Ibid. 524 Ibid. 525 Ibid. 526 Ibid. 527 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 48.) 528 (Smithsonian Animal, pg 452.) 529 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 48.) 530 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 49.) 531 Ibid. 532 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 50.) 533 Ibid. 534 Ibid. 535 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 50.) 536 Ibid. 537 Ibid. 538 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 54.) 539 Ibid. 540 Ibid. 541 Amphisbaenid, www.herpbreeder.com/worldsspecies/Amphisbaenia Internet, Retrieved 08/07/09. 542 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 540.) 543 (Shuker: The Beasts That Hide, pg 73.) 544 Ibid. 545 (Coleman: Cryptozoology A - Z pg 21.) 546 Ibid. 547 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 106.) 548 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 109.) 549 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 194.) 550 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 277.) 551 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 290.) 552 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 424.) 553 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 236.) 554 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 171.) 503 92 555 (Michael Newton: Encyclopedia Of Cryptozoology, pg 7.) 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