Tales
 of large hairy creatures that walk around on two legs and stand seven 
to ten feet tall exist in the folklore of cultures on every continent 
except Antarctica.  The possibility of an unknown ape-like creature 
wondering the woods has captured the imagination of believers and 
skeptics alike, and has became so commonplace that Bigfoot has found his
 way into popular advertising today.  We’re going to look at the history
 of the phenomena, theories on the creature, and how it is viewed around
 the world. 
The term “Bigfoot” was coined in 1958 by a California newspaper. Sightings in the logging community of Bluff Creek propelled the creature onto a national platform. Hundreds of footprints, roughly 16 inches long and 8 inches wide, were found near the logging site. Upon arriving for work, loggers repeatedly found their equipment disturbed and large tracks everywhere. Foreman Jerry Crew made a plaster cast of the tracks and took it to a local newspaper. The editor called it “Bigfoot” and the article was picked up by the Associated Press, going nationwide.
  
The term “Bigfoot” was coined in 1958 by a California newspaper. Sightings in the logging community of Bluff Creek propelled the creature onto a national platform. Hundreds of footprints, roughly 16 inches long and 8 inches wide, were found near the logging site. Upon arriving for work, loggers repeatedly found their equipment disturbed and large tracks everywhere. Foreman Jerry Crew made a plaster cast of the tracks and took it to a local newspaper. The editor called it “Bigfoot” and the article was picked up by the Associated Press, going nationwide.
Nine
 years later, what is either the most famous Bigfoot evidence ever 
captured or the most elaborate and widely believed hoax ever perpetrated
 was captured on 16 mm video camera by Roger Patterson  and Bob Gimlin. 
 The footage became known as the ‘Patterson Film.’  On October 20, 1967 
the two men were riding horses when they came across the creature 
crouching behind a large stump.  Patterson’s horse was startled.  He 
dismounted and grabbed his video camera.  While critics have insisted 
the film is a hoax, Patterson believed he caught a female Bigfoot on 
camera.
Stories of hairy wild men go back as far as recorded history.  In fact, The Epic of Gilgamesh,
 said to be the first book ever written, contains such a beast as a 
character.  The Sumerian poem was found recorded on stone tablets, said 
to be 4000 years old.  The first written account of an encounter comes 
from Norwegian explorer Leif Erikson, who discovered 
America about 500 years before Columbus.  Erikson told of encountering 
huge hairy creatures with black eyes.
Tales of Bigfoot creatures have long existed in Canada among natives. The Shalish tribe called the creature Sasquatch, meaning 'wild man of the woods.' Native Americans across the continent have stories about the hairy wild man. President Teddy Roosevelt recounted a tell about an encounter with the creature by a trapper in his book The Wilderness Hunter. Frontiersman Daniel Boone was said to have shot and killed a ten-foot creature he called a Yahoo.
The 20th century saw tales of Bigfoot encounters, some violent. In 1924 prospector Albert Ostman claimed to have been abducted by a Sasquatch and held captive in British Columbia. The same year Fred Beck and four other miners in Ape Canyon, Washington claimed to have seen the creature, who threw rocks at their camp. Most modern reports lead one to believe that the creature is an herbivore, eating plants only, or an omnivore, living off vegetation and hunting small game.
Tales of Bigfoot creatures have long existed in Canada among natives. The Shalish tribe called the creature Sasquatch, meaning 'wild man of the woods.' Native Americans across the continent have stories about the hairy wild man. President Teddy Roosevelt recounted a tell about an encounter with the creature by a trapper in his book The Wilderness Hunter. Frontiersman Daniel Boone was said to have shot and killed a ten-foot creature he called a Yahoo.
The 20th century saw tales of Bigfoot encounters, some violent. In 1924 prospector Albert Ostman claimed to have been abducted by a Sasquatch and held captive in British Columbia. The same year Fred Beck and four other miners in Ape Canyon, Washington claimed to have seen the creature, who threw rocks at their camp. Most modern reports lead one to believe that the creature is an herbivore, eating plants only, or an omnivore, living off vegetation and hunting small game.
![]()  | 
| The Jacob's photo -Juvenile Bigfoot or bear? | 
Bigfoot critics argue that there is no scientific evidence to 
support the belief that the creature exists.  They point out that large 
numbers of them would have to exist in order to maintain a breeding 
population, and couldn’t go unnoticed.  
Theories about Bigfoot range from a previously unknown species to interdimensional aliens. Bigfoot critics believe reports of sightings are usually misidentified animals or hoaxes. More scientific theories hold that the creature is a descendant of the extinct Gigantopithecus, a cousin of the orangutan. Others believe it is the missing link connecting man to his ape-like predecessors.
Theories about Bigfoot range from a previously unknown species to interdimensional aliens. Bigfoot critics believe reports of sightings are usually misidentified animals or hoaxes. More scientific theories hold that the creature is a descendant of the extinct Gigantopithecus, a cousin of the orangutan. Others believe it is the missing link connecting man to his ape-like predecessors.
![]()  | 
| Sasquatch hitching a ride on Nessie | 
Some of the more out-there theories say Bigfoot is an alien, citing the influx of UFO sightings before and after Bigfoot sightings. Others believe the beast is a demon. Some believe it is an interdimensional being, sometimes able to become invisible or disappear to avoid being seen. It has been published that in the 1970s UC Berkley came into possession of two of the creatures, but they escaped through the 4th dimension and wandered the lab invisible for weeks. Stephen Hawking was there, and could prove it all if he would come forward.
The Illusion Theory of Bigfoot  says that sightings of the 
creature are the result of electromagnetic exposure or hallucinations 
brought on by oxygen deprivation.  The archetype theory speaks more to 
the function of such sightings.  People are fascinated with the idea of a
 wild man, and an unconscious attraction to returning to the wild.  The 
tales are told much like urban legends, used to teach lessons within a 
society.
![]()  | ||
| Yeti? | 
While Americans have been captivated with Sasquatch for 
centuries, reports of similar creatures exist all over the world.  Most 
prominent is the Yeti, or Abominable Snowman of the Himalayan Mountains 
in Nepal and Tibet.  Native followers of the Bön
 religion used to believe the blood of the creature had mystical 
properties and could be used in ceremonies.  The 20th century saw a huge
 increase in the frequency of sightings due to Westerners climbing 
Everest and other mountains in the region in search of adventure.  Large
 footprints were found by climbers, who were told by Sherpas, belonged 
to the Wild Man of the Snow they called 'metoh-kangmi.’  A journalist 
reporting on the phenomena mistranslated the word metoh as filthy, and 
substituted ‘abominable.’ Thus, we have the Abominable Snowman.  
| Khumjung Yeti scalp | 
Adventurers came across the Khumjung monastery that had what 
they claimed to be a Yeti scalp.  Largely regarded as a hoax, testing on
 samples have came back inconclusive.  In 1959 actor James Stewart 
helped to smuggle a ‘Yeti hand’ out of the country.  Bones from the hand
 were replaced with human bones and taken from a monastery.  Testing 
revealed the bones were closely related to a Neanderthal.  
![]()  | 
| Alleged Skunk Ape | 
Alaskans tell of the Urayuli, a Bigfoot-like creature 
found in  the tundras of Southwest Alaska near Lake Llaima.  Sightings 
have been  reported since 1956.  The Urayuli is said to have luminescent
 eyes and  according to folklore were once children who got lost in the 
woods and  became the hairy beasts.  The Urayuli’s arms are said to 
reach it’s  ankles and it is said to emit a high pitched scream like 
that of a  loon.  Florida has its own Bigfoot-like creature known as the
 Skunk Ape  that calls the Everglades home.  Its name comes from the 
smell its  reported to give off, similar to rotten eggs or methane.   
![]()  | 
| Sarah Palin bags an Urayuli | 
  In Australia the Yowie is a part of aboriginal folklore and sightings 
continue today.  The Mapinguary is Brazil’s Bigfoot counterpart.  Its 
said to be nocturnal with red hair and a frightful scream.  It is 
sometimes depicted with its mouth in its stomach, an interestingly 
common variance.  African folklore tells about the Chimiset, an ape-like
 creature with reddish or yellow hair that’s as comfortable in the 
treetops as on the ground.  
The Chuchunaa is Siberia’s Bigfoot, speculated by some to be the last surviving paleo-asiatic aborigines. Locals claim it is a man-eater and has withdrawn to more remote areas to retreat from encroaching civilization. The Nguoi Rung is another name for the Vietnamese Wild Man. It has gray, black, or brown hair and has been seen alone and in packs. Orang Pendek lives in Sumatra and is smaller, standing three to five feet tall. Locals say that they have backward pointing feet to confuse anyone who tries to follow them.
The Chuchunaa is Siberia’s Bigfoot, speculated by some to be the last surviving paleo-asiatic aborigines. Locals claim it is a man-eater and has withdrawn to more remote areas to retreat from encroaching civilization. The Nguoi Rung is another name for the Vietnamese Wild Man. It has gray, black, or brown hair and has been seen alone and in packs. Orang Pendek lives in Sumatra and is smaller, standing three to five feet tall. Locals say that they have backward pointing feet to confuse anyone who tries to follow them.
In
 the 1970s a rash of sightings were reported near Fouke, Arkansas.  The 
deaths of livestock was blamed on the creature, which inspired the film The Legend of Boggy Creek.
 Associated with sightings were foul smells, described as a combination 
of a skunk and a wet dog.  It was said to have bright red eyes the size 
of silver dollars.  In 1972 sightings in Missouri led to reports of the 
Missouri Monster, or Momo.  The Mogollon Monster dwells in eastern 
Arizona and is sometimes reported with red eyes.  It’s described as 
smelling like a combination of dead fish, decaying peat moss, a skunk, 
and the musk of a snapping turtle.  In Ohio reports are still being made
 of the Grassman, and date back to 1869.  It is said to live off grass 
and other vegetation and travel in groups.
  In August 
of last year a Montana man made history with an attempted Bigfoot hoax, 
though certainly not in the way he had intended.  44 year-old Randy Lee 
Tenley donned a ghillie suit, used by the military to camouflage 
snipers, and ran out onto the highway in hopes of inciting Bigfoot 
sightings.  Unfortunately, he was struck by the car of a 15 year-old 
girl who was unable to avoid him.  He was then struck a second time by 
the car of a 17 year-old girl.  Tenley died as a result of the impacts.






No comments:
Post a Comment