Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Mike Swaords receives an issue of the mainstream journal Science and reads an article which he thinks comes very close to being solid scientific evidence for the claim made decades ago by Dr. Myra Shackley that there are/were wild-living non-Homo Sapiens sapiens living in modern times in the central regions of Asia. The article is about the various researches that Russian scientists are doing trying to determine the DNA sequences of extinct species, such as the Mammoth and the Neanderthal, with the focus being a cave in south-central Siberia named Denisova, where they found a pinkie finger that belonged to a completely new human-like species. Swords notes that the cave in question is right smack in the Altai Mountains, a consistent favorite lurking area for Almas and other cryptobeasts of such nature.



Nick Redfern on the Woodwose, the hairy wild-man of the woods, a legendary creature whose origins date back centuries, and whose form can be seen in numerous pieces of medieval European artwork from countries including Germany, Italy, and Britain. But unlike Bigfoot or the True Giants, the Woodwose was more human-like in appearance and nature, which has led some to speculate that these creatures may be feral people, human-beings who, either by choice or circumstances, chose to live solitary lives, deep in the woods. Elsewhere, Karl Shuker discusses one of the most remarkable yet unexpected palaeontological finds of modern times in England in When the Mammoths Came to Town. And finally, the folks at Magonia review True Giants: Is Gigantopithecus Still Alive? and other tomes of cryptozoological interest in Bigfoot and Bigger.



MonsterQuest Season 1 Episode 2 ...



MonsterQuest Season 1 Episode 2 ...



MonsterQuest Season 1 Episode 2 ...



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Mike Rugg is this weeks guest on Bigfoot Tonight February 13th 201







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