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The Top Twenty Cryptozoology Stories of 2002
By
Loren Coleman
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The
Anomalist/
January 2003 |
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The cryptozoology news for 2002 was an intriguing mix of new animal
discoveries, cryptid sightings, sad passings, and, yes, hoax
stories. |
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- Tasmania’s Lake Dulverton Monster
The first supposed sighting of 2002 was on January 4, when the
guests and manager of an Oatland teahouse said they saw a “Nessie.”
The supposed encounter was of a monster in a marshy, shallow
Tasmanian spot named Lake Dulverton. The lake had been dry for a
period of 14 years, and apparently local resorts had suffered as a
result. By the year’s end, the report was taken tongue-in-cheek by
locals and nearby Australian cryptozoologists, as merely a tourism
publicity stunt.
- UK’s ABCs
A more conventional appearance of an unknown animal took place on
January 7, 2002, when eyewitness Michael Lefevre, 49, of Shoebury,
Essex, United Kingdom, spied a black panther on his garden patio.
The five-foot long, two-and-half-foot tall black cat with
“piercing emerald green eyes” was eating some chicken bits Lefevre
had left out for local wildlife. Alien Big Cats (ABCs) have been a
routine problem in the United Kingdom for almost forty years, with
various theories about breeding populations of released pets or
unknown felines being discussed frequently. Nevertheless, the
sightings usually occur so frequently, they often are the first
“cryptids” seen every year. And as it turned out, in December
2002, a Scottish coastal town’s sightings of big cats would close
out the year. At Ayrshire people were having sightings of a giant
cat, which caused a police search at Ardrossan. On December 18,
2002, a motorist saw a huge, brown seemingly felid running across
the A737, half a mile from Dalgarven Mill and heading towards
Dalry. A cryptid feline animal was reported on Christmas Eve,
2002, around 8 PM, when three people in Beith reported a large
black cat. It turned out to be a typical year for ABCs in the UK.
- Philippines’ Pinatubo Monsters
Reports coming out of the Philippines told of five “huge, black
creatures” swimming in the Tikis River, near the former mining
village of Buhawen, scaring Aeta families, on January 12, 2002.
Aeta natives first spotted the 7-foot long, 3-foot wide mysterious
creatures in November 2001, when they were mistaken for floating
logs. The strange creatures have been seen swimming in the river
below Labuan, which is enclosed by tall, thick bushes. Since the
monsters’ heads and tails were not seen, no one could venture what
these locally named "Pinatubo Monsters" could be. Two tribal
leaders were requesting that "biasang tau (scientists)" come and
assist them end the mystery surrounding what the creatures might
be. At last word, no scientists have volunteered to go look.
- West Virginia’s Mothman
In January 2002, the cryptozoology movie of the year opened. It
was the new Mark Pellington-directed motion picture, The Mothman
Prophecies, starring Richard Gere, Debra Messing, Will Patton and
Laura Linney, based on John Keel’s 1975 book. As a result, many
people traveled to Point Pleasant, West Virginia, revisiting the
many special places where Mothman had been seen – including the
TNT area, the National Armory, the pizza joint that used to be the
famed Tiny’s, and the location of the Silver Bridge. The town
produced a map of these sites and opened a Mothman Welcome Center.
A new book, articles, and
websites flapped into existence. The public’s curiosity about
Mothman focused on the reality behind the fictionalized movie,
and topics on Mothman, Thunderbirds, and other big bird reports
were discussed on over 200 media outlets during the month. January
2002 also saw the broadcast on the Sci-Fi Channel of the first
serious documentary made about the subject, David Grabias’s In
Search of the Mothman. No rash of new Mothman sightings occurred.
- Michigan’s Mystery Cats
The first of many "mystery cat" reports from southern Michigan
began in February 2002. Near Niles, on February 2, the Young
family saw a cream-colored large cat, the size of a German
shepherd, 40 feet from their home’s French doors. They decided it
looked like a cougar. The Youngs continued to watch the animal as
it strolled east toward Edwards Way, a subdivision off of Brush
Road. Jesse Young then went to the home of a neighbor, an avid
hunter, and the two checked the footprints in the yard. The animal
had crossed the flower garden, about 25 feet from the patio door,
leaving pugmarks of a large cat. The Youngs’s report was the first
of many, and the Michigan Department of Natural Resources had an
ongoing battle with the media all year, stating they did not feel
these were really cougars. The DNR stated: "There is no
substantive evidence that there are naturally occurring cougars in
Michigan. Some argue that there are, but we don't have any good
evidence there are." Of course, don’t tell that to the Youngs and
the other witnesses that saw these mystery cats during 2002.
- Pennsylvania’s Waynesboro Ape Tracks
Early in February 2002, the finds of hundreds of 15-inch
“anthropoid” footprints in the mud along the northern edge of the
Waynesboro Reservoir, Pennsylvania, caused a flurry of inquiries,
plaster cast takings, and newspaper interest. Investigators for
the Bigfoot Field Research Organization examined the footprints,
as well as others from around the country. Some investigators
decided a hoaxer wearing “funny feet” could have made the
seemingly apelike tracks, but results were inconclusive. Around
the same time, reports of a northern Indiana "mystery beast" also
had researchers scratching their heads. It appears that mid-winter
hoaxing may have been behind both incidents, although the jury is
still out.
- Southeast Asia’s Khting Vor
Cryptozoological debating graced the pages of the journal Nature
late in February. Rival zoological teams were arguing over whether
the twisted horns of the Pseudonovibos spiralis, the Khting Vor, a
part of Cambodian folklore since at least 1607, were evidence of a
myth or a new species. The story has spilled over from former
years, beginning in 1994, when two German researchers described a
new species from the Vietnam-Cambodia border. The animal is known
only from its horns and section of the head above them. It is
still a zoological wonder. Results from DNA analysis have been
confusing. Austrian and German researchers, who took DNA from the
German specimens, find the Khting Vor are closely related to goats
and sheep. But then in 2001, Russian researchers, using a
different DNA sequence and different specimens, asserted it to be
a type of buffalo. Now, in 2002, Alexandre Hassanin, a molecular
scientist at Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris, said
Pseudonovibos never existed. Hassanin published a 2002 paper
noting that many of the horns show evidence of having been twisted
and carved, and the DNA sequences from Pseudonovibos are identical
to domestic cow DNA. University of Kansas Natural History Museum’s
Robert Timm admitted there are hoaxes but remarked that the
specimens he has, the Vietnamese horns collected by Americans in
1929, are of Pseudonovibos and genuine. From the X-rays he has
done, he said the Kansas horns have natural twists and ridges.
Ronald Pine of the Field Museum in Chicago agreed with Timm. The
debate will continue, until a live Khting Vor is captured, or
until the two camps trade horns and do more DNA sampling.
- Vietnam’s Giant Turtles
On March 2, 2002, dozens of Vietnamese bystanders had
fifteen-minute sightings of Hanoi’s Hoan Keim Lake Monster. The
creature they saw was one member of a small colony of giant but
apparently soft-shelled turtles. According to local media reports,
a turtle also appeared in the lake on February 16. The Giant
Turtles of Hoan Kiem Lake appear to weigh up to 440 pounds.
Although they are thought to have inhabited the lake ever since it
was established hundreds of years ago, they are so rarely seen
that many locals still consider them to be legend rather than
reality.
- South Africa’s Coelacanths
What would a cryptozoological year’s roundup be without some news
about coelacanths? In April, South Africa's FM5 broadcast a report
that divers into the Sodwana Canyons have spied some pregnant
coelacanths, which would be a first. Meanwhile, the South African
government announced it was spending $1 million to conduct
research that might answer questions about why the fish has
survived, why no young are seen, and how best to protect it in the
future. "It's not just a fish. It's more than a fish to us," said
Dr. Tony Ribbink, leader of the coelacanth research project.
Despite criticism that the money is a waste in such a poor country
as South Africa, the government sees benefits to saving the
coelacanths, just as there have been ones in saving the giant
panda for China. "Statistics show that Africa has some outstanding
scientists and yet the continent has fewer scientists than any
other continent," said Ben Ngubane, minister of arts, culture,
science and technology. His agency is sponsoring the coelacanth
project with help from Germany, Mozambique and Madagascar. "If
science of Africa is to become globally competitive, and if it is
going to excite the imagination and stimulate young minds, then it
needs a strong element of creativity and innovation and perhaps a
little danger, too." Meanwhile, the coelacanth might help South
Africa with tourism too. In Sodwana Bay, local tee-shirt merchant
Ann Pape told reporters: "I've always had a fascination with them.
It's like our own Loch Ness monster. Not everyone is going to see
it, but we know it's there."
- Pacific Northwest’s Bigfoot
Police reported on June 10, 2002, that a Clallam County,
Washington, resident had seen a Bigfoot near his Burnt Mountain
Road home. The man, whose name was not released by police, told of
having sighted a hairy, humanlike beast, and then immediately
calling the authorities. "We were unable to locate, identify or
capture the Sasquatch," Forks Police Chief Mike Powell told
reporters. In general, the warmer months in North America, usually
a hot time for Bigfoot reports was running a little cold for 2002.
As the drought continued in the West, many researchers theorized
Sasquatch and human movements, which might have resulted in more
encounters, were kept to a minimum. However, during the summer of
2002, filming occurred of Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization
members’ and scientists’ opinions of the evidence for Sasquatch,
such as the Skookum cast. The hour-long documentary, Sasquatch:
Legend Meets Science, is produced by Doug Hajicek of Whitewolf
Entertainment Inc., and set for broadcast on The Discovery Channel
in January 2003.
- A World Awash in Ziphiids
The year 2002 continued the recent trend and was another good one
for new ziphiid (beaked whale) species discoveries. In the July
2002 issue of Marine Mammal Science, two new species of Mesoplodon
were scientifically described. Mesoplodon perrini was verified
during 2002, from four stranded animals in California. This
ziphiid has never been seen alive. The new whale became the 21st
species of beaked whale to be described scientifically. Also the
journal dealt with renaming another recently described Mesoplodon,
the Mesoplodon bahamondi to M. traversi. The species is only known
from three skulls (two are just partial skulls). They are unknown
from strandings or live sightings. On another front, Robert
Pitman, a California ziphiid specialist, remarked in 2002 that the
mysterious “Mesoplodon sp. A” is almost certainly going to be
shown to be Mesoplodon peruvianus, which was just described in the
last decade. Pitman, interviewed for this list, felt the sp. A is
in fact the here-to-fore unrecognized adult male of M. peruvianus.
In separate 2002 ziphiid beachings, one in Japan in July, and
another in South Africa in August, confirmations were made that
these were examples of the extremely rare Longman's beaked whale,
Indopacetus pacificus. Near the same South African beach on which
this Longman's beaked whale came ashore, a mere three months
earlier, a rare megamouth shark, a species unknown to science
before 1976, also stranded.
- India’s Monkey Men
Apelike creatures seen on the Indian subcontinent formerly might
have been called “Yetis” or “Abominable Snowmen.” But since the
“Monkey Man” scare of 2001, this sensational term seems to be the
one the international media will use for a time. On July 21, 2002,
Indian and English-language newspapers told of attacks from an
ape-like animal, in the eastern city of Patna. Local newspapers
there were full of reports of "mysterious Monkey Man attacks." [more
info on Yetis!]
- Colorado’s River Dinosaurs
In expedition news, Nick Sucik, a Minnesota cryptozoologist,
traveled to Colorado, to investigate reports from the last twenty
years of three-foot tall, five-foot long "River Dinosaurs,"
reportedly said to walk bipedally. Sucik conducted two
fact-finding explorations in July and October, to the Cortez and
Yellow Jacket, Colorado, areas, to follow up on old as well as
2001 encounters with the cryptid. Local reptile pet retailers
thought the creatures might be escaped monitor lizards; Sucik
remained open-minded about what might be out there.
- Andean Parrot
Ornithologists Jorge Velasquez and Alonso Quevedo spotted a flock
of what they told the press was the most rare bird species in the
world, the indigo-winged parrot, thought extinct for 90 years. The
parrots were seen on July 28, 2002, on an Andean volcano in
central Colombia. The rediscovered species was first recorded in
the region in 1911, but disappeared soon after. The bird,
Hapalopsittaca fuertesi, known also as Fuertes' parrot, is now
currently classified as critically endangered.
- Angola’s Giant Black Sable
Not seen since 1972, the giant black sable antelope (Hippotragus
niger valiani) of Angola was rediscovered in August 2002.
Expedition leader, Professor Wouter van Hoven, from the Centre for
Wildlife Management at Pretoria University, said: "Three separate
sightings of the giant sable antelope were recorded. The first
sighting was of two adult bulls, followed by a second bull and two
juveniles." The expedition had five separate sightings but was not
able to take any photographs. Cryptozoologists are very familiar
with this dilemma. But because the species was already known,
confirmation by scientists through sightings alone is seen as
verification enough.
- Sumatra’s Orang Pendek
Early in September 2002, the British media – lead by the BBC -
exploded with news stories about a group of explorers being on the
verge of proving the existence of “Yeti.” Although the press got
the name wrong, the Yeti-like creature is really the small
anthropoid named the Orang Pendek, the essence of excitement was
well deserved. The three-man team, Adam Davies, Andrew Sanderson,
and Keith Towley, had found hair samples and footprints in Western
Sumatra, and experts in Australia to confirm a new species was
involved were analyzing them. One expert is Dr. Hans Brunner, a
world-renowned hair expert and associate of Deakin University in
Melbourne, who is studying two hairs found by the team. (Brunner
has previously provided testimony, which helped prove the
innocence of Lindy Chamberlain - the mother wrongly convicted of
killing her baby in the 1980s.) No match could be found when the
samples were tested against orangutan, chimpanzee, gorilla, sun
bear, red leaf monkey, pigtail macaque, Malaysian tapir and human
hair. Dr. Brunner has yet to check the hair samples against other
native species from Western Sumatra but is confident they will not
resemble hairs found by the explorers. According to Davies,
Brunner feels the confirmation of a new species of primate is “in
the bag,” and Brunner’s forthcoming formal paper in a scientific
journal will discuss the new animal. Dr. Brunner is planning to
say, point blank, that the Orang -Pendek does certainly exists and
its profile is certain, that it is in fact a unique derivative of
the orangutan.
- Midwest’s Maned Mystery Cats
After several sightings of maned mystery cats in Arkansas, in late
September 2002, four 600 to 800 pound maned felines, identified as
“African lions” were killed near Quitman, Arkansas. Of course,
those interested in cryptid cat reports called “American lions”
have pointed out that if ever one of these large cats was killed,
it could look very much like an African lion. No DNA analyses were
done on the killed cats and their bodies were apparently
destroyed. A wild cat owner denied claims that the “lions” came
from his nearby animal farm, Safari Unlimited. Sheriff Dudley
Lemon inspected Safari Unlimited and said he believed the owner
was telling the truth. Then on September 29, hundreds of miles
away, Carter County, Tennessee, residents Troy Guy and Ashley
Clawson, were traveling on Poga Road before sundown when they saw
a large animal standing on an embankment off the road. "We was
going up Poga Road; it was standing on the bank looking at the
cars," said Guy. "It was brown and big and had a thing around its
neck." They saw it then take off up an embankment. The young
couple was not the only eyewitnesses. Evelyn Cable, owner of
Cable's Hampton Family Restaurant, was driving on U.S. Highway 321
in the early morning hours during September 2002, when she saw
what appeared to be an African lion standing beside the highway.
"I just rounded the curve up at 321 and it was standing there,"
said Cable, who noted the “African lion” had a mane around its
neck. "I wasn't sure what it was, but it sure looked like one." In
October 2002, Maine cryptozoologist Christopher Gardner traveled
to the Poga and Elk Mills areas of the Carter County, and
discovered the last sighting had happened earlier in the month.
- Alaska’s Big Bird
In October, southwestern Alaskans saw a bird the size of a small
plane, and within the month, David Letterman was making jokes and
ABC News’s Buck Wolf was writing a thoughtful column about the
event. Such is the course of cryptozoological media incidents
these days. It all began the week of October 5, 2002, when a
Dillingham pilot John Bouker spotted the giant bird while flying
passengers to Manokotak. His passengers also saw it. He calculated
that its wingspan matched the length of a wing on his Cessna 207,
about 14 feet across. Peter Porco of the Anchorage Daily News
broke the story. He soon discovered that villagers in Togiak and
Manokotak had been seeing the huge birds in recent weeks. On
October 9, Moses Coupchiak, 43 of Togiak, 40 miles west of
Manokotak, saw it and then said of the huge bird: "At first I
thought it was one of those old-time Otter planes. Instead of
continuing toward me, it banked to the left, and that's when I
noticed it wasn't a plane. The wing looks a little wider than the
Otter's, maybe as long as the Otter plane." Porco reported
Coupchiak said the bird flew behind a hill and disappeared. Other
reports from Palmer came in, but after the nine-day wonder factor
of the media flap, the big bird reports from Alaska got less and
less attention. People went back to a local acknowledgement of
what they already knew, some kind of big unknown bird flies around
Alaska, often classically shown as Thunderbirds on Native totem
poles.
- Scotland’s Nessie
The Inverness Courier sent to the printers a story on the last day
of the year that sightings of the Loch Ness Monster for 2002, had
hit a record low. Only three sightings were recorded, plus a
dubious affair with newspapers publishing a series of hoax
photographs. “It’s the lowest I have ever heard of since I have
started recording sightings,” Gary Campbell of the Official Loch
Ness Monster Fan Club stated. “It’s the first time in a long while
there’s been a deliberate hoax for whatever reason.” Also
interesting to ponder is that 2002 will go down as a year in which
no Nessie hunting expeditions took place at Loch Ness, and the
American visitor numbers remained low following the continued
post-9/11 fears of overseas trips. Campbell told the Inverness
Courier that the low number of Loch Ness Monster observations
could be part of a natural cycle. “It’s a funny thing, but we have
newspaper cuttings going back to 1854 and ever since the 1930s,
when it became an international phenomenon, there’s been a five to
10-year cycle in reporting Nessie and this could be one again,” he
remarked. The Scottish paper noted that Campbell, however, was not
ruling out a bumper number of reports in 2003. “That’s one of the
things with Loch Ness. You never know what’s going to happen,” he
declared.
- Passings
Grover S. Krantz (1931-2002)
Grover S. Krantz, 70, an anthropologist who was never afraid to
take the unpopular academic position that the primates called
Bigfoot and Sasquatch actually exist, died peacefully from
pancreatic cancer, on the morning of February 14, 2002, in his
Port Angeles, Washington home. He wrote several books and articles
about Bigfoot, and firmly supported the importance of the
footprint evidence and the Patterson-Gimlin film footage. "I fully
accept the Patterson film," Grover Krantz was quoted in 1999.
Bigfoot's loping gait is "consistent with a 500-pound biped," he
said. "I've attempted to imitate it, and I really can't do it
worth a damn." Upon his death, his wife Diane Horton noted: "There
will be no local service. Grover's body will be sent to the 'Body
Farm' at the University of Tennessee and then his skeleton will be
sent to the Smithsonian Institution along with most of his
academic materials. As he helped students in life, his skeleton
and materials will be available to serious scholars in death.”
Krantz was recognized internationally, in respectful tones, in the
New York Times, other large newspapers, and on such outlets as
National Public Radio.
LeRoy Fish (1943-2002)
LeRoy Fish, 59, of Blachly, Oregon, according to his wife,
Jacqueline, went out to their barn to do some chores on the
morning of March 20, 2002. She found him soon thereafter, having
died of congestive heart failure. Fish was one of the primary
scientific consultants who examined the Skookum "body cast" - said
to have been made by a Sasquatch. In September 2000, Richard Noll
and twelve other individuals on an expedition looking for evidence
of Bigfoot made this remarkable find near Skookum Meadow, in the
Gifford Pinchot National Forest in southern Washington State. Fish
received his bachelor's and master's degrees from Walla Walla
College, and his doctorate in Zoology/Ecology from Washington
State University. He was a retired wildlife ecologist, and had
been a consultant to the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO)
on the Skookum cast and other matters. Dr. Fish had over 30 years
experience in wildlife research.
Thor Heyerdahl (1914-2002)
On April 18, 2002, Thor Heyerdahl, 87, the adventurous Norwegian
anthropologist, world-traveler, explorer, filmmaker, and author
died of cancer in Italy, after a long illness. Cryptozoologically,
he had several encounters through his life and maintained an
interest in the field. For example, Heyerdahl had an intriguing
encounter while on his honeymoon in 1937, were he sighted an
unidentified mysterious wingless bird on the South Pacific island
of Hiva-Oa, which he relates in his 1974 book Fatu-Hiva, Back to
Nature. (In 1980, cryptozoologist Michel Raynal interviewed
Heyerdahl about the incident, reconfirming the significance of the
sighting.) In April 28, 1947, Heyerdahl set sail from the Peruvian
coast in the 45-foot "Kon Tiki." Taking 101 days and 4,300 miles,
the project demonstrated that voyages across the oceans were a
possibility, proving his theory that Polynesia was populated from
South America, and not southeast Asia as previously assumed.
During journey, Heyerdahl saw, near the Kon Tiki raft, strange
phosphorescent animals and other extremely large unknown creatures
in the middle of the night that have never been identified. Later
treks and theories would take him from Polynesia and Easter Island
to the Tigris, the Indus Valley, Africa, and the Canary Islands.
Born in Larvik, on October 6, 1914, Heyerdahl was a national hero
in his homeland, and was named Norway's Man of the Century in
1999. Heyerdahl's unique unorthodox approach to challenging
mainstream anthropological theory produced many popular books,
well-attended lectures, and celebrated documentary films,
including the 1951 Oscar-winning Kon-Tiki.
Jordi Magraner (1967-2002)
Jordi Magraner, 35, the famous Spanish zoologist and
cryptozoologist who has been conducting field research for 12
years on the barmanu (the wildmen of northern Pakistan) apparently
became a victim of the warfare in the border area of Afghanistan
and Pakistan, when he was assassinated in Pakistan. He was killed
(his throat was cut) on August 2, 2002, in his house in the north
of Pakistan, along with his 12-year-old servant, Wazir Ali, also
found with his throat slit. Magraner had been on the track of
barmanu, (which means "the big hairy one"), in Northern Pakistan
and Afghanistan, using strict scientific methods in his witness
interviews. From 1992 through May 1994, during his trek to the
Shishi Kuh valley in the Chitral region of Pakistan, his
expedition investigated the barmanu and found footprints. Jordi
Magraner, Dr. Anne Mallasseand, and another associate, all
Europeans, said they also had heard two series of unusual guttural
sounds that could have been made by a primitive primate voicebox.
They tracked down witnesses who claimed to have seen the strong
smelling animal that made the sounds. On August 6, 2002, reports
out of Peshawar confirmed the arrest of six suspects in connection
with Magraner’s murder. Rumors circulated that some in the village
thought Magraner was a spy because of all of the communication
equipment he had.
Peter Chapple (1954-2002)
On August 26, 2002, after suddenly suffering a heart attack, Peter
Chapple, 48, well-known Australian cryptozoologist, died at
Dendenong Hospital. Peter Chapple was the President of the
Australian Rare Fauna Research Association (ARFRA), in Emerald,
Victoria, Australia, which recorded more than 2000 sightings of
the Thylacine in Victoria alone. Chapple founded ARFRA in June
1984, after he had an encounter that year with a Australian
cryptid panther in the forest in the Dandenongs. Peter Chapple
devoted the last 18 years of his life to researching Victoria's
Big Cat and mainland Thylacine incidents, and he had become a
major figure in Australian cryptozoology. He traveled to Fortean
Times' London conferences to give lectures on "Australian
Thylacines, Big Cats and Devils," in 2000, and on further
Australian cryptozoology at "Myths and Monsters 2001."
Ray Wallace (1918-2002)
Bigfoot prankster, 84-year-old Ray Wallace died of heart failure
on November 26, 2002. Unfortunately, the media used it as an
opportunity to allow Wallace his final prank on Bigfoot. Wallace’s
son Michael told Bob Young of the Seattle Times: "Ray L. Wallace
was Bigfoot. The reality is, Bigfoot just died." Nephew Dale Lee
Wallace posed with alder-wood carvings of giant feet he said
Wallace used in 1958 to create Bigfoot. The worldwide media
swallowed the claim whole. Results of the Wallace story were
headlines and stories alluding to the questionable conclusions
that “Bigfoot was dead” and “the wife was in the fur suit” of the
Patterson film. This despite the fact that reporter Young had
quoted Michael Wallace as saying Ray Wallace said he had nothing
to do with the Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot film. A real Bigfoot was
probably watching Wallace as he faked a few sandbar prints during
the media attention late in 1958, for the Jerry Crew footcasts
show different tracks than what the Wallace fake feet imprints
would have produced.
John Dennis (1916-2002)
John V. Dennis, 86, a biologist, ornithologist and botanist who
maintained an active interest in cryptozoology, died of cancer
December 1, 2002, at his Princess Anne, Maryland home. In 1948,
Dennis explored the inaccessible Oriente Province Mountains of
Cuba in search of the rare ivorybill woodpecker. The Washington
Post noted that he found “a nest and three adults of an ivorybill
subspecies.” In 1966, in the Big Thicket area of East Texas,
Dennis had what he described as "my only good look at a North
American ivorybill," but this observation went unverified by
ornithological organizations. As cryptozoologist Mark A. Hall
pointed out soon after the biologist's death, John V. Dennis wrote
of his interest in collecting mystery cat sightings in his
important 1988 book, The Great Cypress Swamps (published by
Louisiana State University Press). Dennis’s best-known book was
published in 1975, A Complete Guide to Bird Feeding. Dennis was
responsible for popularizing bird feeding and feeders throughout
North America. From being a member of the Flying Tigers during
World War II to doing contract ornithological work for the
Smithsonian Institution in some of the wildest places on the
Earth, Dennis experienced an adventure-filled and exciting life.
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© Loren Coleman 2003
Cryptozoologist Loren Coleman is the author of
twenty books, including
Bigfoot! The True Story of Apes in America
(Paraview Pocket, 2003). His website is
www.lorencoleman.com. |
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