Loch Ness Monsters and Raining Frogs The Worlds Most Puzzling Mysteries Solved

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Loch Ness Monsters and Raining Frogs The Worlds Most Puzzling Mysteries Solved Page 4

by Albert Jack


  Nonetheless, a number of scientists and leading members of the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO) are, instead, stating that the footprint molds produced by the pranksters are themselves the fake, not the tracks. In a bizarre piece of reverse logic, some are insisting the Wallace family must prove their claims. John Green, described as one of America's foremost Bigfoot researchers, loftily remarked of Wallace that if he had revealed the footprint mold during his lifetime he “would, of course, [have been] called upon to prove himself.” I am unable to see how anybody can become a “foremost researcher” when they have discovered exactly the same amount of genuine evidence of Bigfoot as I have—that is, absolutely nothing.

  It was, after all, John Green who interviewed Albert Ostman in 1957 and fell for his tall (in more senses than one) story. Ostman said he had been looking for gold in British Columbia during the gold rush of 1924 when he had been kidnapped by an adult male Sasquatch. The beast gathered up the man in his sleeping bag and carried him several miles. He was then dumped on the ground and realized, shortly afterward, that he was being held by a family of four who would not let him leave their camp. After six days of captivity, he concluded he was being considered as future husband material for the young female, so he fired his rifle into the air, distracting the family for long enough to make his escape.

  When Green asked why Albert had not told his story before, the aging gold prospector replied that he thought nobody would have believed him. And few did, except John Green and his vast fan base of Bigfoot believers ready to leap to his defense on every issue. But Green did finally concede, in 2007, that he “would not believe the story if he were told it today.”

  Take another established piece of “proof—the footage of a female Sasquatch filmed by Roger Patterson in Bluff Creek. The story goes that in October 1967 Patterson and his friend Bob Gimlin were riding through the area when their horses reared up and they were both thrown to the ground. As they picked themselves up, they noticed a “huge, hairy creature walking like a man” about thirty yards ahead of them. Patterson grabbed his movie camera and began filming the beast as she loped away, pausing only once—and looking directly into the camera lens as she did so—before disappearing from view. The film has become world famous and has been studied by zoologists, cryptozoologists, paleontologists, biologists, anthropologists, archaeologists, and everyone else. And you will be unsurprised to hear that opinion is divided about whether it is genuine footage (Bigfootage?) or not.

  Leading scientists did, however, conclude at the time that there was “nothing in the film that leads them, on scientific grounds, to suspect a hoax.” Having now made my own detailed study of the film, using ultraslow, frame-by-frame-pausing technology obligingly provided by Sony (namely, the DVD player in my front room), I can now add to the debate. To my albeit untrained eye, the creature looks suspiciously like a man in a monkey suit on his way to a fancy-dress party.

  Seasoned Bigfoot researchers nevertheless regard the film as a significant piece of evidence, saying that to suggest that it was a hoax would be “demonstrably false”—that old double-negative rhetoric again. But even nonresearchers, including the physical anthropologist Grover Krantz, confirm the film does depict a “genuine unknown creature.” Another prominent primate expert, John Napier, is still not entirely convinced but once revealed: “I could not see the zipper then and I still can't. Perhaps it was a man dressed up in a monkey costume; if so it was a brilliantly executed hoax and the unknown perpetrator will take his place with the great hoaxers of the world.” So does this mean if he can't see the zip, it can't be a monkey suit? Or had the hoaxer compounded his/her cleverness by employing an early form of Velcro?

  In 2004, Greg Long revealed in his book The Making of Bigfoot that the grainy clip was in fact an elaborate hoax. Long claims he had managed to trace the monkey suit to costume maker Philip Morris, a gorilla suit specialist from North Carolina. In the book, Morris states he sold the suit to Roger Patterson for $435, and when he saw the Bigfoot photos on the television and in the newspapers a few weeks later, he recognized the suit as the one he had made. Morris claims never to have revealed this information before because to break “client confidentiality” in such a public manner would have lost him customers. It might have saved millions of research dollars, though.

  Greg Long revealed the man in the suit as Bob Heironimus— a friend of Patterson's—who subsequently told The Washington Post: “It's time people knew it was a hoax. It is time to let this thing go … I have been burdened with this for thirty-six years, seeing the film-clip on television numerous times. Somebody's making lots of money out of this, except for me. But that is not the issue, the issue is that it is finally time to let people know the truth.”

  John Green, of course, immediately went on the offensive, calling him a liar and declaring Greg Long had made “a fool of himself.” And while Heironimus was a known associate of Patterson's and has passed two lie detector tests, and Greg Long has found several independent, but supporting, witnesses, John Green still has yet to provide a single piece of evidence for his case that the film is of a genuine, if as yet unidentified, hairy giant.

  Step forward, then, Roger Patterson himself. Unfortunately, he can no longer be called upon, as he died in 1972. However, the other witness to the Bigfoot sighting, Bob Gimlin, is still alive. Bob no longer speaks personally about the film as he is “fed up with the whole Bigfoot thing,” but his attorney, Tom Malone, issued a statement to The Washington Post in response to their story about Heironimus's revelation: “I am authorized to tell you that nobody wore a gorilla suit or monkey suit and that Mr. Gimlin's position is that it's absolutely false and untrue.” Which seems clear enough, but it is quite possible Gimlin didn't know about Patterson's hoax and was simply used to increase its credibility. Even if he was in on the act, Gimlin has always maintained the film to be genuine, and so any revelation now, forty years after the event, would be somewhat embarrassing for him.

  In 1969, another set of tracks was reported—in Bossburg, Washington—that, on closer inspection, revealed that the giant beast's right paw was in fact clubfooted. Experts argued that this indicated that the tracks were very likely to be the first genuine piece of evidence to support the existence of the Sasquatch. Professor John Napier, whose book Bigfoot was published in 1973, wrote: “It is difficult to conceive of a hoaxer so subtle, so knowledgeable—and so sick—who would deliberately fake a footprint of this nature. I suppose it is possible but so unlikely I am prepared to discount the idea it is a hoax.” Straight from the school of “If I couldn't think of it then neither could anybody else,” and with such imaginative minds on the trail of Bigfoot, it is hardly surprising he has managed to elude us for so long.

  Despite sightings of Bigfoot reported in every American state except Hawaii and Rhode Island, the creature's natural habitat is said to be the remote woodlands and forests in the Pacific Northwest of America and Canada. The Rocky Mountains have provided many sightings, as have the Great Lakes. But if this is the case, how could he have gotten to Florida and other southern states? The Sasquatch would have had to leave the cover of his remote woodland hideaway, and it is difficult to imagine how such a creature could travel so far without leaving behind at least some credible evidence. You would certainly spot him in the Greyhound bus queue.

  But, unfortunately for the wonderfully named Texas Bigfoot Research Center (TBRC), it turns out that most of the evidence found, such as blood or hair samples, footprint casts or photographs, usually turns out to be fake and never, as yet, from an unknown creature. Investigators at TBRC say they receive reports of more than one hundred sightings each year in Texas alone, while on the home page of their website Janet Bord states: “If the skeptics are right and there is no such creature as Bigfoot, then it is a fact that thousands of Americans and Canadians are either prone to hallucinations, or are compulsive liars or unable to recognize bears, deer and vagrants.” Quite how tramps became involved is anybody's guess.
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  Also on the home page of the TBRC website is something that bears further examination. One Rick Noll is quoted stating his reasons why no firm evidence for the existence of a big, hairy, part-man, part-simian-type monster has been found:

  NO ONE IS SPENDING ENOUGH TIME IN THE WOODS,

  NOT MANY KNOW WHAT TO DO IN SEARCHING, OVERLOOKING THINGS, OR VICE-VERSA, SEEING THINGS THAT AREN'T SIGNIFICANT [SIC] TO THE TASK,

  THERE ARE NOT MANY OF THESE ANIMALS AROUND,

  THEY, LIKE MOST ANIMALS IN THE FOREST, KNOW HOW TO CAMOUFLAGE THEMSELVES QUICKLY AND EASILY,

  MOST ENCOUNTERS WITH HUMANS ARE PROBABLY MISTAKES ON THE PART OF THE BIGFOOT, YET RESEARCHERS ARE TRYING TO FILL IN THE PICTURE WITH THEM AS TO BEING SOMETHING SIGNIFICANT.

  So there you have it. Five good, solid, scientific reasons why we still have no credible evidence of the existence of Bigfoot. So how is it, then, that despite the use of the whole spectrum of technology—from heat-seeking cameras with night vision to thermal imaging—nobody has confirmed the existence of Bigfoot?

  Bigfoot enthusiasts apart, the group of people keenest to obtain as much information as possible of the apeman's existence would be the U.S. government. And as they have surveillance equipment that can detect a small nuclear warhead buried in the desert somewhere near Baghdad, it is fair to assume they would have picked up one of the thousands of Sasquatches that have to exist if all the Americans and Canadians who claim sightings are not lying.

  Such a large number of sightings does suggest that Bigfoot, or a relative of his, could well be out there; indeed I, like Janet Bord, refuse to believe that so many people can be lying. But hundreds of small, circumstantial, and unprovable reports do not add up to a single solid fact. It is like pouring thirty separate measures of Jack Daniel's into a large glass. Added together they do not make the drink any stronger in flavor; it still tastes exactly the same. But if you drink it all—as I have discovered through experimentation on your behalf for this very investigation—you will fall over. Scientifically speaking, weak evidence should not become any stronger just because there is lots of it, although it can affect your judgment in the end.

  But the Texas Bigfoot Research Center is not the only organization dedicated to finding firm evidence: there are many others throughout America. On December 27, 2003, for example, the Pennsylvania Bigfoot Society (PBS) hosted their fifth annual East Coast Bigfoot Conference (ECBC). The keynote speaker, Stan Gordon—a veteran researcher with over forty years’ experience, founder-director of the Pennsylvania Association for the Study of the Unexplained (PASU), and winner in 1978 of the Meritorious Achievement in a UFO Investigation Award— concluded his opening speech linking Bigfoot sightings with known UFO activity in the same areas, although he stopped short of announcing: “Bigfoot is a spaceman.” Which I would have done, just for the headline. “There is no doubt the evidence suggests there is something out there,” he assured the audience, as they sat there hanging on his every word, then continued: “We just don't know what it is.”

  Another speaker at the conference, Paul John son, a chemistry professor at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, thought he knew: “Bigfoot is a quantum animal that moves freely between the real world as we know it and a quantum world outside the reach of conventional laws.” He went on to explain how, in quantum physics, electrons do not follow the normal rules of physics. Although he admitted his ideas were unconventional, he also noted (contradicting himself in the process) that nothing as large as Bigfoot could behave like an electron in reality, which was a relief because everybody knows that a living being is unable to dematerialize and then reappear in perfect working order in another place. Unless, of course, you are traveling on the starship Enterprise, and then you can.

  Another speaker at the ECBC, Janice Coy from Monroe County, Tennessee, claimed her family had developed a relationship with a family of Bigfoot (or should that be “Bigfeet”?) since 1947. Her grandfather, having stumbled across an injured Bigfoot, had bandaged its broken leg and allowed it to recover in a barn at the family farm. She claims to have even held a baby Bigfoot in her arms and explained that for years she had tried to obtain photographic evidence, without success. She picked up on Paul Johnson's quantum theory and suggested that was the reason none of her photographs ever showed images any clearer than a “shapeless fuzz.” And no one likes to see a shapeless fuzz now, do they?

  On one occasion the Sasquatch family, realizing the camera was present on a nearby tripod, used long sticks to retrieve food from a place out of range of the lens. On another, the roll of film Janice submitted to a commercial processing lab was returned to her after the film had been mysteriously overexposed, and every image lost forever. She also claimed she was trying to obtain DNA evidence to provide comprehensive proof of the family's existence; no one asked her why she didn't just pinch a couple of hairs from the baby she had held in her arms. That would have been enough to prove her bizarre claims. But that's enough about the ECBC, so let's move on.

  Where DNA testing has been carried out on purported evidence, none has been proved to come from an unknown beast. Usually Bigfoot hairs are found to have come from bison or other common animals. The absence of fossil evidence is another powerful argument that Bigfoot does not exist, although believers counter this by suggesting that the absence of fossil evidence is not evidence of fossil absence, and so it goes on and on and on. But the fact remains that not a single hair, bone, tooth, nail, or claw has ever been found that belongs to a giant hairy manlike being that cannot be explained, and yet there is plenty of evidence found in similar areas that bears, moose, deer, and even dinosaurs and hairy mammoths have left their traces behind them. So why not Sasquatch, if there is one?

  The late professor Grover Krantz, a reputable anthropologist, was one of few scientists to state publicly that he believed in Bigfoot. He personally interviewed hundreds of witnesses, studied film footage and photographic evidence, and inspected many plaster casts of footprints and other imprints. He estimated that between two hundred and two thousand Bigfoot lived in the Pacific Northwest of America and he dedicated his life to proving it, but he never turned up any credible evidence that could be regarded as anything approaching proof. However, the professor was unabashed, once suggesting that most animals hide before they die and their bodies are quickly devoured by scavengers, noting that he had “yet to meet anyone who has found the remains of a bear that was not killed by human activity.” Which is a fair point, but then he hasn't met everybody yet, has he?

  It was Grover Krantz who announced to the world that the clubfooted prints had offered the “first convincing evidence that the animals were real.” He also said of other tracks he had studied that a “push-off mound” was “impressive evidence” to him. This was a small mound of soil, present in some Bigfoot tracks, that Krantz had decided was created by the “horizontal push of the front foot just before it leaves the ground.” He stated with authority that no artificial rubber or wooden mold would leave such an impression.

  More recently, in 2005, a story was told of a young Bigfoot that had been accidentally caught in a bear trap. A boy and his father had taken the beast back home and put him in a cage, but when the Bigfoot became distressed, the boy's father let it go. In a world where everybody now has video cameras, even on their mobile telephones, it is hard to believe that their first instinct wouldn't be to take a close-up picture of the creature. Quite frankly, although this story is reported as genuine, if it turns out to be true, then I will shave my head and become a French monk.

  So, in summary, what is still needed is a carcass. That would be ideal, although any Sasquatch fossil or bone would do—just something more convincing than the plaster mold of an oversize footprint made by a carved wooden or plastic shape strapped to the foot of a prankster being pulled along by a slow-moving truck to help create the effect of giant footsteps that “man could not possibly have made.” Even the apparently genuine footprints look suspicious to me. Look again at the assessment of th
e small mound of earth focused upon by the expert Dr. Grover Krantz—caused “by a horizontal push of the front foot just before it leaves the ground.” Now go and have a walk across your living room as I just did, and notice how your front foot never leaves the ground, until the other one passes it of course, but by then it is your back foot. So what is he talking about?

  As every single apparently credible piece of material evidence of Bigfoot has turned out to be a hoax, then there is nothing else for it—we do need a carcass. Indeed, Krantz himself believed this would be the only way to finally remove any doubt in people's minds as to the existence of Bigfoot, and he called for hunters to bring one in. But that also worries me, because what if the one that is shot turns out to be the only one? Hold your fire after all, fellas …

  Either way, the search, for some, will continue, and groups of people known by their initials, including Central Ohio Bigfoot Research (COBR) and the Gulf Coast Bigfoot Research Organization (GCBRO), will continue to flourish and attract new members and devise new acronyms. I might even start my own group and call it the Time Wasters And Tricksters Society, of which I am told by some that I am perfectly qualified to be the president. Because if enough people continue to insist Bigfoot, or Sasquatch, is alive and well somewhere in the wilderness, there will always be hoaxers leaving clues for them to find. In reality, it will remain as impossible to prove Bigfoot does not exist as it is to prove you do not have an invisible, silent pink lion standing in your garden, looking at you right now and thinking, “Lunch.” You can't prove there isn't one, you know. After all, any absence of evidence for invisible, silent pink lions is not evidence of their absence.

 

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