Who Is The Number One Female Bigfoot Researcher In The Country?
Bigfoot Sightings Common in Four State Area Joplin Globe
Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma make up a quartet of states with
a higher than average number of Bigfoot sightings, dating back
centuries. In fact, the sightings reported in that area are among the
earliest recorded in the entire country. One such sighting in the
mid-19th century prompted an eyewitness to write, "It cannot be caught
and nobody is willing to shoot it." That could serve well as a motto
for today's Bigfoot hunters, actually. A man named Harlan Ford
had sightings of a very different nature in 1970s Louisiana...of his
own feet inside a pair of shoes with "claws" attached faking Bigfoot
tracks. Bigfoot Evidence tells us exactly How The Honey Island Swamp Monster Was Hoaxed
and how some Bigfoot hunters were fooled until the hoaxer shoes were
found. The shoes were apparently not all that well hidden, since locals
knew all about them and one woman claimed to have taken them to school
for show and tell day. Meanwhile, Tyler Stone gives us all a lesson in
marine cryptozoology with an in-depth chart listing all the variations
of Modern Marine Reptiles
and Loch Ness Mystery shows us a photograph of the man behind the
first known photo of Nessie and gives us a little more back story on Hugh Gray: The Man and His Monster.
He goes on to convincingly show that the simple position of the shadow
in the Nessie photo lends a lot of credence to the photo as being
genuine evidence. Hugh Gray was reviled at the time and for decades
afterward as a hoaxer. Sometimes, crypto beasts of legendary status make
an unlikely comeback, as Karl Shuker shows us: In Tune with the New Guinea Singing Dog. This canine was once near-extinct and rarely sighted and now the breed is all over the world both as pets and in zoos.
Bigfoot conferees cite track record
Columbus Dispatch
By Jennifer Smith Richards Well, no — of course, a Bigfoot didn't show. They don't want to be found, you know. But the annual Ohio Bigfoot Conference in Cambridge went on yesterday without one of the creatures, often described as 9 feet tall, ...
See all stories on this topic »
Columbus Dispatch
By Jennifer Smith Richards Well, no — of course, a Bigfoot didn't show. They don't want to be found, you know. But the annual Ohio Bigfoot Conference in Cambridge went on yesterday without one of the creatures, often described as 9 feet tall, ...
See all stories on this topic »
No comments:
Post a Comment