Latest Bigfoot "evidence"

Status
Not open for further replies.
Ah, so DNA from an unknown primate would prove we have unknown primate DNA. It wouldn't prove we still have one today. It wouldn't prove what it looks like or where it was. How wonderful, such a discovery. There's an unknown primate yet to be found that we know nothing about. I already know this much. Chris B.

Oh now you're worried about proof. It's all "You can't know for sure... therefore Figboots!" until it could work the other way.

You know the DNA sample (if it even exists in the first place) is pure bunk. As long as it hasn't been tested you can play your silly "We don't know what it is... therefore it could be Figboot!" game. Actually get it tested and you can't do that.
 
Nope. Sorry but this link is about Sima de los Huesos finds and nothing to do with the Denisova find mystery DNA sequence. Specifically, I addressed the mystery DNA sequence taken from the female Neanderthal toe bone at the Devisova site.

I'm not interested in Sima de los Huesos finds, Denisovans or Neanderthals, only the mystery DNA sequence collected from the Neanderthal toe bone.
Chris B.

I don't think you understood what is being communicated in the link, or here. And the DNA is not a mystery at all; I am uncertain why you prefer to call it that. We know the DNA sequence itself, and even where it came from. Previously unknown does not mean mystery.

Did you want a link to one of the scientific papers that describe, in a more technical way, the isolation and sequencing of the DNA from a bone fragment (the "non existent bone" fragments to which you referred in your post) from the Denisova find: http://www.sciencemag.org/content/337/6098/1028

Again, the point is that they, and the Spainish cave find, are not Neanderthals. The DNA was not collected from either a Neanderthal nor a toe bone. It was collected from a Denisova finger bone (in Siberia) and DNA was collected separately from an interbred hominid species in Spain.
 
I'm not interested in Sima de los Huesos finds, Denisovans or Neanderthals, only the mystery DNA sequence collected from the Neanderthal toe bone.
Chris B.

The "mystery" DNA is Denisovan. Once again, that is the point. But if you are not interested in it, why did you bring it up? I agree that it is fairly distant from the main thread topic, but it does illustrates how useful DNA alone can be.
 
Last edited:
Ah, so DNA from an unknown primate would prove we have unknown primate DNA. It wouldn't prove we still have one today. It wouldn't prove what it looks like or where it was. How wonderful, such a discovery. There's an unknown primate yet to be found that we know nothing about. I already know this much. Chris B.

Even DNA from an unknown primate, even if possibly (or clearly) extinct, would be very exciting; look at the Denisovan story. Especially in the USA: look at Kennewick Man.

But further, it should be possible to distinguish if your sample came from recent spit versus an old fossil. If the former, you win! A live, previously unknown hominid, probably (if people believe your story about the collection site) in North America!

I am glad that you already know this much, but almost no one here believes it. Didn't you want to rub our noses in it? Prove that you are right and we are wrong? Didn't you post as much? If not, I am in awe of your lack of ego.
 
"If it were only that easy for Bigfoot."

"If it were only that easy for Cinderella"

"If it were only that easy for the Tooth Fairy."

"If it were only that easy for the Easter Bunny."

"If it were only that easy for Santa Claus."

"If it were only that easy for chupacabra."

"If it were only that easy for aliens."
 
You know the DNA sample (if it even exists in the first place) is pure bunk. As long as it hasn't been tested you can play your silly "We don't know what it is... therefore it could be Figboot!" game. Actually get it tested and you can't do that.

Again- if it does exist at all. It is a bit of the reverse of "I think that this pain in my gut is due to cancer, but it can't kill me if I make certain that I don't see a doctor about it."

If the DNA only had 1% chance of being Bigfoot, and someone offered to analyze it for me for free, I would jump on the chance. But then, the prior attempt to find Bigfoot DNA by analyzing a large number of different "Bigfoot" hair samples indicates that the chance of Chris's sample being from Bigfoot is virtually indistinguishable from zero. Better to dream than to know.
 
Again- if it does exist at all. It is a bit of the reverse of "I think that this pain in my gut is due to cancer, but it can't kill me if I make certain that I don't see a doctor about it."

If the DNA only had 1% chance of being Bigfoot, and someone offered to analyze it for me for free, I would jump on the chance. But then, the prior attempt to find Bigfoot DNA by analyzing a large number of different "Bigfoot" hair samples indicates that the chance of Chris's sample being from Bigfoot is virtually indistinguishable from zero. Better to dream than to know.

No kidding.

"Hey, I heard that you have some DNA that might be from bigfoot."

"Yeah."​

"I'll test it for free, at no cost at all to you."

"Not worth it."
"Worth? I don't understand. You give me the sample, and I test it. Again, at no charge."

Umm, my dog ate my homework

So, you have a DNA sample, and I have offered to test it for free, but you don't want to do that?

Chris B - looks at his feet.​
 
A DNA sample identified as unknown north american primate would rock the world and shatter minds. Heads might actually explode. It would be the first tangible evidence for the existence of a "bigfoot" ever. It would be the lead story in every periodical scientific and otherwise. The man who found it could use the notoriety to fund any manner of expedition to collect a specimen. Universities and corporations alike would shower his "research" with funding.

Sadly for science and humanity the man with this sample just can't be bothered because.... reasons.

ETA: On the flip side if this sample comes back as raccoon the man with the sample would know he more to do in order to establish the existence of bigfoot. He could leave the sample behind and venture forth into the woods to collect new, better, evidence of his woolly friend. Once more dear friends unto the breach!
 
Last edited:
I did view the pics in your links, and I reviewed them prior to this post. I see what you're saying. But in the "future" scenario you present I'd be missing currently available information on the background of those drawings and masks.
I suppose if we threw current background info out the window it would be anyone's best guess as to which may have been real or which may have been made up...
You're like the Geico commercial horror spoof about making poor decisions. The smart girl pleads for them to go to the running car, to which others say "What are you, crazy? Let's hide behind those chainsaws."

That would lead into the next set of pics you listed. Physical artifacts from living creatures used in ceremonial or self decoration. In that case it would be easy to sort through and make a determination that a bear claw necklace would indicate there were bears at some point in the past. That's cut and dry. If it were only that easy for Bigfoot. I understand from your point of view it is that easy. No Bigfoot parts among NA can only mean no Bigfoot right? But how can you be certain? You can't. The only thing you can be certain of is that Native Americans didn't collect Bigfoot parts, not that they didn't have any knowledge of them or that they existed or not. Chris B.
Seriously, your ability to learn, which I decree is non-existent, has probably been hampered by all your BLAARGing. You don't know where reality ends and fantasy collides. You're acting like a spoiled-child-who-only-wants-to-get-his-way to a whole slew of intelligent, savvy and even nice people here by refusing to learn even a single thing of what they preach. Your post above proves it.

Ah, so DNA from an unknown primate would prove we have unknown primate DNA. It wouldn't prove we still have one today. It wouldn't prove what it looks like or where it was. How wonderful, such a discovery. There's an unknown primate yet to be found that we know nothing about. I already know this much. Chris B.
You may know it, but what about humanity? Don't they deserve to know too? Or is this a case of they're on their own? Real humanitarians like you have no time for such shenanigans, right?

I don't think you understood what is being communicated in the link, or here. And the DNA is not a mystery at all; I am uncertain why you prefer to call it that. We know the DNA sequence itself, and even where it came from. Previously unknown does not mean mystery...
He has to use the word "mystery" to keep Bigfoot's possibilities in alignment with everything else that's unknown. To him everything that's not 100% known is a 100% mystery. He declared the Denisovan find a "mystery" simply to reiterate his "we don't know everything so we don't know anything" LUNACY he repeats constantly. Of course he forgot that we know far more about Denisovans than Bigfoot. Like that they actually existed.

The only real "mystery" here is guessing what ChrisBFRPKY is going to say about the next line of intelligent reasoning and rationale here. Only he, himself and him knows for sure.
 
My view is that ChrisBFRPKY has to keep posting ever more amazing statements to move the thread away from the discussion of the previous almost-as-amazing statement. So far, it appears to have worked to some extent: there are a lot of questions for ChrisBFRPKY that we had begun to ask and discuss, but now these appear to have been left unanswered as we instead followed Chris's twists and turns.
 
The Denisova people are human, they are not a different species.

http://johnhawks.net/weblog/reviews/neandertals/neandertal_dna/naming-denisovans-2014.html

Their DNA is present in modern humans.

Defining species is complicated. Denisova, like Neanderthals, were a potion of our genetic heritage (at least some of us). They are part of the complicated process that led to us. But many scientists would not classify them as Homo sapiens (not same species), even if they may share our genus of Homo.
 
Last edited:
Not that my opinion matters, but I tend to be more of a lumper than a splitter. Even so, I prefer to consider Neanderthals as their own species. In see Denisovans as a subspecies of modern humans or Neanderthals.
 
Defining species is complicated. Denisova, like Neanderthals, were a potion of our genetic heritage (at least some of us). They are part of the complicated process that led to us. But many scientists would not classify them as Homo sapiens (not same species), even if they may share our genus of Homo.

I tend to defer to Dr. Hawks on this type of question. His reasoning seems sound. http://johnhawks.net/weblog/topics/evolution/species/species-problem-gibbons-2011.html

What do we do with a population like the Neandertals, or the Denisovans? Each was more genetically distant from the average living human than members of living populations are from each other. Each evolved during a long period of isolation or strongly restricted gene flow from each other and from sub-Saharan Africans. Still, the level of genetic difference among these populations was comparable or less than that separating populations of great apes that historically have been recognized as subspecies. So that’s what I would call them. Subspecies of Homo sapiens.

http://johnhawks.net/weblog/mailbag/neandertal-species-2012.html

Hello Dr. Hawks, I understand your a busy man so my question will be brief. I learned in my biology class that two different species can not interbreed and produce fertile offspring. If this is the case, how can we carry 4% Neanderthal genes? If they were a different species we should have not been able to crossbreed. Could you please explain this if you have time?
They weren’t a different species.
 
Last edited:
I don't think you understood what is being communicated in the link, or here. And the DNA is not a mystery at all; I am uncertain why you prefer to call it that. We know the DNA sequence itself, and even where it came from. Previously unknown does not mean mystery.

Did you want a link to one of the scientific papers that describe, in a more technical way, the isolation and sequencing of the DNA from a bone fragment (the "non existent bone" fragments to which you referred in your post) from the Denisova find: http://www.sciencemag.org/content/337/6098/1028

Again, the point is that they, and the Spainish cave find, are not Neanderthals. The DNA was not collected from either a Neanderthal nor a toe bone. It was collected from a Denisova finger bone (in Siberia) and DNA was collected separately from an interbred hominid species in Spain.

The "mystery" DNA is Denisovan. Once again, that is the point. But if you are not interested in it, why did you bring it up? I agree that it is fairly distant from the main thread topic, but it does illustrates how useful DNA alone can be.

My view is that ChrisBFRPKY has to keep posting ever more amazing statements to move the thread away from the discussion of the previous almost-as-amazing statement. So far, it appears to have worked to some extent: there are a lot of questions for ChrisBFRPKY that we had begun to ask and discuss, but now these appear to have been left unanswered as we instead followed Chris's twists and turns.

The Denisova people are human, they are not a different species.

http://johnhawks.net/weblog/reviews/neandertals/neandertal_dna/naming-denisovans-2014.html

Their DNA is present in modern humans.

Defining species is complicated. Denisova, like Neanderthals, were a potion of our genetic heritage (at least some of us). They are part of the complicated process that led to us. But many scientists would not classify them as Homo sapiens (not same species), even if they may share our genus of Homo.

I'm still looking for the mysterious toe of mystery.

Not that my opinion matters, but I tend to be more of a lumper than a splitter. Even so, I prefer to consider Neanderthals as their own species. In see Denisovans as a subspecies of modern humans or Neanderthals.


I understand now where guys you are coming from. There seems to be some confusion of which "mystery" is being discussed between us. There were "2" mysteries at the Denisovan dig. You're focused on Denisovan DNA and I'm focused on the other "mystery" partial DNA sequence collected from the Denisova find genome you're referring to. Denisovans have to their credit a finger bone and a few teeth from that dig. (maybe some new stuff will be upcoming from Spain)The mystery DNA I'm referring to came from a female Neanderthal toe bone. This little lady was inbred. She had Neanderthal DNA, Denisovan DNA and some partial mystery DNA to her credit.

Neanderthals and Denisovans were different although very closely related. As with modern humans the Denisovans were close enough to allow cross breeding with Neanderthals.

Now here's the important part as it relates to where I'm coming from. In the Denisova find we have:
1.Neaderthals
2.Modern Man
3.Denisovans
4.Mystery DNA sequence

The mystery DNA suggests that the Denisovans interbred with a mysterious fourth group of early humans that were living in Eurasia at the time. Between 2.7% and 5.8% of the Denisovan genome comes from this mystery species.

So at the find we have:
1.Neanderthal DNA collected (no big deal)
2.Modern Man DNA collected (no big deal)
3.Denisovan DNA collected from a finger and some teeth (new addition to the tree, pretty exciting deal)
4.Mystery DNA partial sequence found mixed in with the find of an inbred female Neanderthal/Denisovan toe bone (very big deal)

There is speculation that this partial sequence may have come from Homo Heidelbergensis but the fact is it's still a mystery and we have nothing but speculation so far. As the science of DNA continues to progress, we may have an identity at some point for #4, but not yet.

It's exciting to think about what findings will be made of the jaw bone from Taiwan. It looks to contain teeth as well. If DNA can be recovered, will it be related to the Denisovans or mystery DNA #4? or yet another? At the least I'm expecting to see a skull model based on this jawbone to be completed in the near future. (somebody pinch me)

But what of the Denisovans or the mystery DNA #4 finding? We know both existed. We have the DNA to prove it. But since we are unable to determine any morphological features from DNA we're kinda stuck in both cases. In the case of the Denisovans we lack a skull or other bone that would help us determine morphological features. We can't do that with a finger bone or teeth. And with mystery sequence #4 , we lack a type specimen altogether since the little Neanderthal lady was inbred and only revealed a partial DNA sequence for #4. In short, we don't know what either looked like. As there is nothing else to go on yet. Hurry up and wait all over again.
Chris B.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top Bottom