I am aware of this website, but it does not convince me. Nor does the BFRO itself convince me when it labels itself a scientific organisation.
I would argue that a hairy "large upright bipedal 9 foot primate" looks very similar to a hairy large upright bipedal (were you aware that they both mean pretty much the same?) 9 foot ursid when seen from a distance. Again I present to you the example of Nessie, thousands have mistaken rocks, drain-pipes and even seagulls for a 45 feet long plesiosaur so a bear for a "Bigfoot" is not too much of a stretch. Furthermore, I would imagine you agree that at least the majority of sightings are either hoaxes, cases of misidentity or simply wishful thinking and, as such, have answered your own question on whether people can be wrong.
Blackduiker: Oh, but you wouldn't argue that the ursid seen at any distance, near or far, could flee at great speeds still on only those two legs would you redpanda? I think not. I give you more logic than that.
Quote=Redpanda I am aware of how remote areas of the Pacific Northwest are thank you (as I said to Ituri, I have been there). But if you think about it, there are suprisingly few virtually uninhabited areas of pristine wilderness free of roads and hunters large enough to support a thriving population of "Bigfoot".
Blackduiker: Well in answer to this segment of your debate, let's take my home state of California for starters, America's most populous by far, and third largest in size; Last counted at some 36,457,549 residents(though we are now in the midst of the 2010 nationwide census, and those numbers will rise even higher). That's some 12 percent of the overall U.S. population. And consisting of some 169,696 square miles. Over 19 million cars, drive the 167,981 miles of recognized highways on a daily basis, throughout the year. Now of this total state population, more than 25 million people live in only four urban centers, comprising only 5.6 percent of California's total area; Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, and Sacramento. And remember, we're referring to America's third largest state in land mass. Much of the rest of California is quite wild, and ranges from inhospitable deserts to snow capped mountains; higher than any others found in the lower 48 states. Some 100 peaks over 13,000 feet. Our National Parks, some of them quite huge, include Yosemite, Death Valley, Sequoia/Kings Canyon, Joshua Tree, Channel Islands, Lassen Volcanic, and Redwoods. In addition to these, California has 18 National Forests, and 8 State Parks, covering 31,927 square miles or 19.5 percent of the states total area. The Colorado Desert covers 2,500 square miles, while the Mojave (shared with Arizona and Nevada, which I just drove across less than a week ago) and Sonora (extending into Arizona and Mexico) spread over 22,000 and 120,000 square miles, respectively. In and around those forests and deserts, California has 140 designated wilderness areas. We're talking millions of acres in all!
Has all of the state been properly explored, surveyed and mapped? Not exactly. I'm now quoting a couple of paragraphs from Michael Newton's 'Strange California Monsters': "When Zoologist Ivan Sanderson prepared his classic global survey of unknown primates, published in 1961, he discovered that the region between San Francisco and the Oregon border had been "surveyed" only once--in 1859. As Sanderson explained, 'The survey was ostensibly made on a 1-mile grid; that is to say the surveyor was supposed to walk a mile north, south, east, or west, take a fix and drive a stake, and continue doing this until he reached some previously selected line at the other end that linked up with the next survey.'
"In fact, however, the land is so rugged that surveyors barely penetrated its fringes, marking locations of visible peaks and accessible settlements, following rivers or trails, and then completing grids on paper from a combination of logic and imagination. Page after page of the surveyors' notebooks--preserved to this day at San Francisco's Land Office--are totally blank. In later generations, aerial and satellite photography filled in some of the gaps, but those photos tell us little or nothing about the wildlife found at ground-level. In effect, much of that territory remains unexplored today." Page 13. (See also Ivan Sanderson's, Abominable Snowmen, pp. 100-102.
Quote=Redpanda Furthermore, sightings are scattered and not concentrated in these areas. Not only this, but I would argue that the Virungas are more "remote" and difficult to navigate, yet it took ethologists like Fossey and Schaller a lot less than 150 years to find the gorillas (and think of how many people are looking and have looked for "Bigfoot")!
Blackduiker: The Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla, gorilla) was not officially recognized by science until 1847. But the Mountain Gorilla (Gorilla beringa) was not "discovered" until the 20th century, despite many expeditions to Africa by museums, zoos, and universities, specifically for Gorillas. As a matter of fact, as I mentioned earlier, when local native accounts of a monster ape (ngagi and ngila), first came to the attention of Western scientists, living on the misty heights of the Virunga Volcanoes of eastern African, they were dismissed as "absurd legends." Sound familiar? In 1898, a trekker named Ewart Grogan, found a Mountain Gorilla skeleton, but as in other cases of supposedly "unknown animal" finds, he failed to bring the evidence down with him. It wasn't until October 1902, that Belgian army captain von Beringe and a companion, finally killed two gorillas on the Virungas' Mount Sabinio. After both specimens had fallen into a valley, it was only after much effort that Beringe and his companion were able to recover one of the bodies, and prove the natives legends of the Mountain Gorilla to be true.
Quote=Redpand And please don't ask me to talk from fact rather than presumption when you're arguing for the existence of an undiscovered hominid in one of the world's most developed nations with no more than a few blurred photographs (most of which have been uncovered as hoaxes) and the testimonies of ramblers who wouldn't know a bear from a coyote as proof. A case of practice what you preach methinks.
Blackduiker: Again redpanda, you question the intelligence of multiple witnesses. Many that would know the local bears better than probably any of us here at ZooChat. Seeing that many have encountered the local fauna their entire lives.
Quote=Redpanda Finally, I will point out that you haven't actually addressed any of my points. Why do descriptions vary so widely? Why are sightings so spread out? Why has a body never been found? Why has there never been clear photographic evidence? Why has the creature not yet been discovered?
Blackduiker: The reason I point out the website. For they can explain the evidence, or lack of evidence, far more thoroughly than either you or I can. Or I can give you a vast bibliography that handles this same old objection, taken from my personal library, or referenced from many other books I've been reading since 1969.
Quote=Redpanda I welcome explanations, because right now I can only think of one good one.
Blackduiker: Please keep an open mind. And remember, it was revered French biologist Baron Georges Cuvier, considered the father of paleontology, that declared in 1812 the end of the age of zoological discoveries. CUVIER'S RASH DICTUM.
Blackduiker: Oh, but you wouldn't argue that the ursid seen at any distance, near or far, could flee at great speeds still on only those two legs would you redpanda? I think not. I give you more logic than that.
Blackduiker: Well in answer to this segment of your debate, let's take my home state of California for starters, America's most populous by far, and third largest in size; Last counted at some 36,457,549 residents(though we are now in the midst of the 2010 nationwide census, and those numbers will rise even higher). That's some 12 percent of the overall U.S. population. And consisting of some 169,696 square miles. Over 19 million cars, drive the 167,981 miles of recognized highways on a daily basis, throughout the year. Now of this total state population, more than 25 million people live in only four urban centers, comprising only 5.6 percent of California's total area; Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, and Sacramento. And remember, we're referring to America's third largest state in land mass. Much of the rest of California is quite wild, and ranges from inhospitable deserts to snow capped mountains; higher than any others found in the lower 48 states. Some 100 peaks over 13,000 feet. Our National Parks, some of them quite huge, include Yosemite, Death Valley, Sequoia/Kings Canyon, Joshua Tree, Channel Islands, Lassen Volcanic, and Redwoods. In addition to these, California has 18 National Forests, and 8 State Parks, covering 31,927 square miles or 19.5 percent of the states total area. The Colorado Desert covers 2,500 square miles, while the Mojave (shared with Arizona and Nevada, which I just drove across less than a week ago) and Sonora (extending into Arizona and Mexico) spread over 22,000 and 120,000 square miles, respectively. In and around those forests and deserts, California has 140 designated wilderness areas. We're talking millions of acres in all!
Has all of the state been properly explored, surveyed and mapped? Not exactly. I'm now quoting a couple of paragraphs from Michael Newton's 'Strange California Monsters': "When Zoologist Ivan Sanderson prepared his classic global survey of unknown primates, published in 1961, he discovered that the region between San Francisco and the Oregon border had been "surveyed" only once--in 1859. As Sanderson explained, 'The survey was ostensibly made on a 1-mile grid; that is to say the surveyor was supposed to walk a mile north, south, east, or west, take a fix and drive a stake, and continue doing this until he reached some previously selected line at the other end that linked up with the next survey.'
"In fact, however, the land is so rugged that surveyors barely penetrated its fringes, marking locations of visible peaks and accessible settlements, following rivers or trails, and then completing grids on paper from a combination of logic and imagination. Page after page of the surveyors' notebooks--preserved to this day at San Francisco's Land Office--are totally blank. In later generations, aerial and satellite photography filled in some of the gaps, but those photos tell us little or nothing about the wildlife found at ground-level. In effect, much of that territory remains unexplored today." Page 13. (See also Ivan Sanderson's, Abominable Snowmen, pp. 100-102.
Blackduiker: The Lowland Gorilla (Gorilla, gorilla) was not officially recognized by science until 1847. But the Mountain Gorilla (Gorilla beringa) was not "discovered" until the 20th century, despite many expeditions to Africa by museums, zoos, and universities, specifically for Gorillas. As a matter of fact, as I mentioned earlier, when local native accounts of a monster ape (ngagi and ngila), first came to the attention of Western scientists, living on the misty heights of the Virunga Volcanoes of eastern African, they were dismissed as "absurd legends." Sound familiar? In 1898, a trekker named Ewart Grogan, found a Mountain Gorilla skeleton, but as in other cases of supposedly "unknown animal" finds, he failed to bring the evidence down with him. It wasn't until October 1902, that Belgian army captain von Beringe and a companion, finally killed two gorillas on the Virungas' Mount Sabinio. After both specimens had fallen into a valley, it was only after much effort that Beringe and his companion were able to recover one of the bodies, and prove the natives legends of the Mountain Gorilla to be true.
Blackduiker: Again redpanda, you question the intelligence of multiple witnesses. Many that would know the local bears better than probably any of us here at ZooChat. Seeing that many have encountered the local fauna their entire lives.
Blackduiker: The reason I point out the website. For they can explain the evidence, or lack of evidence, far more thoroughly than either you or I can. Or I can give you a vast bibliography that handles this same old objection, taken from my personal library, or referenced from many other books I've been reading since 1969..
Would you like me to quote to you the fact that Sir Peter Scott lost a great deal of credibility in the zoological world for giving the Loch Ness Monster a latin name before its discovery. No? Well then I think that proves that an only vaguely related mistake one person made many years ago has little relevance on the Sasquatch debate.
not quite right there. The scientific binomen that Sir Peter Scott gave the Loch Ness Monster in 1975 was Nessiteras rhombopteryx (Greek for "The Ness monster with diamond-shaped fin), after the famous underwater "fin" photo. It was journalists who came up with the anagram "monster hoax by Sir Peter S." (not Sir Peter himself). Nessie researcher Dr Robert Rines replied with his own anagram: "Yes, both pix are monsters--R."Zambar said:I think he retaliated by saying it was an anagram of 'Monster Hoax'.
probably the first camera trap set up to try and record a thylacine was by Guiler himself in 1967 I believe
Or they exist, and no has suceeded to shoot one fatally so far.
From what I read and heard, limb and facial structures do not vary completely in most of the (serious) accounts. And given the situation, individual animals also react either aggressively or back up and flee.
If I remember correctly, there have been reports of (almost) traffic collisions involving Sasquatches; however, none of them seemed to have been fatal for the big-footed guys.
"What are "spontaneous deaths"? Wild animals hardly have a stroke out of a sudden...Even a death caused by a predator or an accident will result in the corpse being eaten by scavangers and decomposting.
I know this may sound a little bit off the thread but here we are all on about what if's and do they actually live.
With so much land and sea still to be discovered (searched and mapped accuratley) we can only wonder.
But untill the day someone comes forward with either a live or dead corpse then all we can do is wonder.
BELIEVE IT OR NOT??
fascinating(very early comments) i just checked on wiki and the gassoline tank that the money was ment 2 be sitting on was around 18 inches tall
fascinating