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Simple Challenge For Bigfoot Supporters

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I don't mind jumping on this. What was the purpose of posting the photo? Would you like to share one of yourself?

thumb_1224090.jpeg


Would my tattoos and the odd piercing bar my chances of being an accomplished scientist? I'm only assuming my messy hair might be a plus.

Why is this a surprise? Tube posted the link to the web page on his site. I posted part of the page with the link. Don't you guys check these things out?

The link was on his BFF profile a couple of years ago. I checked it out then, found I'd been doing battle with a PhD and felt about like I did when I found out someone I'd just beaten in Chess was an International Grandmaster.
 
...and New York State, Georgia, Arkansas, New Jersey, Illinois, Michigan, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Iowa, and much of the rest of the NA continent, England, Russia, China, Australia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Viet Nam, Brazil, Tibet, Nepal, Venezuela, Turkey, Pakistan, India, blah blah blah... am I filtering?
Nah, keep Brazil out of the list... Our mythical creatures, created by a blend between Native Brazilian, African and European traditions can be interpreted as bigfeet-like (or wildmen) creatures only after a lot of cherry-picking on their descriptions.

Apologizing for yet another derail, here's something I wrote (but never posted) when LAL raised the Mapinguarí issue. Its about some Brazilian myths that may be eventually misinterpreted by cryptofolks as real unknown animals. I think it may be a good opportunity to see how many common elements they have with myths from other parts of the world. Its an indication of their origin deep within our psiché, and no unknown real animal is needed for template.

Curupira or Caipora:
Small, human like, with feet pointing backwards. Quite often riding a wild pig, is a defender of the wildlife. Commonly described as a trickster, uses whistles and his footprints to confuse hunters and travellers.This myth was found nearly everywhere in Brazil.
Variants: hairy or not, long red hair, large ears, pointed (green or blue) teeth, androgionous figure. Some variants say it can change to animal form (usually game) and lure greedy hunters deep in to the forests, where they get lost. Seems to be native to Brazil, and probably suffered little "blending" with elements from European and African culture, when compared with other myths. Ignored by cryptozoologists.

Note: At Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Lost World" there is a native myth called "Curupuru", a creature much feared by the natives, later found by the main characters to be an aggressive race of hairy hominids. It seems to be a blend of the Curupira (mispelled) with the Mapinguarí. I guess he created it after hearing or reading about Brazillian myths.

Saci-Pererê:
Small, human-like, black skin and with a single leg. Wears a red hood and smokes a pipe. Is known by playing tricks and pranks with travellers, hunters and farmers. Lives among bamboos and rides whirlwinds. Can become invisible and transform itself in to birds and other animals. Only at Northern Brazil this myth is not found. Has several points in common with the Curupira myth. This myth seems to be originally from Native Brazilians, but incorporating several elements from African and European cutures. Ignored by cryptozoologists.

Mapinguarí:
Very tall, vaguely humanoid. Hairy, but with an alligator-like skin, impenetrable to arrows and lances. Aggressive, is supposed to attack and eat hunters and travellers; cattle are also supposed to be attacked by this being. It is said to attack and eat its victims by the head. Also know as pé-de-garrafa (bottle-foot) due to its circular footprints. Its quite often described as having a single eye and a large mouth at its belly. Sometimes also described as having a turtle shell at its back and large claws. Supposed by some cryptozoologists to be a bigfoot-like creature or a giant sloth. I think this "interpretation" requires a lot of detail cherry-picking... Restricted to Northern Brazil and also to some parts of Central Brazil. Mostly a native myth. I'm not sure of how much elements it borrows from other cultures.

Note: A very vaguely similar mythical creature (no mouth in the belly and not single-eyed) seems to be present in Patagonian (Argentina) folklore, but it has a tail. Some cryptozoologists claim this mythical animal may be a ground sloth.
I still gotta touch the Patagonia subject with more detail sooner or later at a bigfoot thread...

Bicho-homem:
The bicho-homem (man-beast or man-animal) is very tall, has a single leg (some blending with the saci?) with a rounded foot, that leaves circular footptints. It also has a single eye and large claws. Very ferocious and meat-eating, may be a variant from the Mapinguarí myth. Found at Northeastern Brazil.

Capelobo:
A variant describes it as being half-human, with giant anteater-like nose and a rounded body. Meat-eating, nocturnal, attacks newborn cats and dogs, but may attack larger prey and humans, breaking their skulls and eating the brain or drinking the victim's blood. Has some points in common with the Mapinguarí. Restricted to North and Northeastern Brazil. The name "Capelobo" mixed Native Brazilian (cape = a broken, bent or crippled bone) and Portuguese (lobo = wolf) words, indicating the myth may have borrowed European elements.

Note: Its most common representation is a non-bipedal creature with the body of a tapir (but having a larger size), the snout of a dog or a hog and long hyena- or razorback- like hairs. As far as I know, ignored by cryptozoologists, but sooner or later they will try to correlate it with an hyena-like animal, a bear or an Andrewsarchus...

Lobisomem (Werewolf):
You already know what it is. This myth probably was brought to Brazil by European colonists. Manned wolves and wild dogs probably helped it to survive...
 
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Thank you.Yes, agreed. What I meant was when you said 'I must say I am not sure any dermal captured in a track is that of a Sasquatch' are you sure any of those 'dermals' are the dermatoglyphics of anything?Please forgive the overly simple question but do you think the features we've been looking at and discussing are not casting artifacts?

Well they could be, I have never said I think Tube is completely wrong, some of these features described as dermal ridges could be a casting artifact, but all of my attempts to create these "artifacts" have failed.

Your question is exactly why I decided to do casting experiments using soil from Onion Mountain. It should also be mentioned there are features on this cast that have yet to be explained, and as far as I know Tube has not addressed this specific issue yet - if I missed it, then my apologies but I have not seen him describe how this feature could happen.

The only thing I am sure of at this point is this - casting dermal ridges in the soil from Onion Mountain is possible, as I have casted my own. I will continue to have this opinion until the day comes I am able to recreate the "Crowley Lines".
 
I have just sent Meldrum the e-mail. Some of you might think it a bit long-winded and that just sending the sig version would be better but for myself I thought it was extra exposition was worth it and I really would like to encourage him to post here.

I am opening a new thread on the subject soley for the purpose of discussion with him should he choose to accept my invitation and I would humbly ask that only members who are interested in respectful discussion with Dr. Meldrum on sasquatch evidence participate.

Here is the mail which was under the subject heading 'Regarding confirmation of alleged dermatoglyphics in sasquatch prints'. (I didn't feel like being anal and using alleged twice.) :

Dear Dr. Meldrum,

Thank you for taking the time to read this mail. Given the nature of your efforts regarding sasquatch evidence and the number of people, proponents and skeptics alike, familiar with them you undoubtedly receive large volumes of correspondence much of which is unworth replying to. I hope this mail will prove otherwise.

First, if I may, please allow me to make a brief preface and introduction of myself so as to better give a context for this correspondence. My name is (my real name) and I am a member of the JREF skeptics forum (which I believe you are already familiar with) where I post under the handle 'kitakaze'. I'm sure the mention of that site does little to pique your interest and if you still reading I hope you will bear with me.

I have had a particularily keen interest in the subject of sasquatches from a very young age and as an adult have continually researched the subject to the best that my circumstances will allow which are limited due to the fact that I live in Japan. I did find the tracks of (appeared to be an adult and juvenile) and had a subsequent close proximity encounter with what at the time I interpretted as being sasquatch several years ago while camping on the west coast of Vancouver Island. I must admit that in the time since I have become skeptical of the existence of sasquatches and question my original interpretation of that event based on what is in my opinion a lack of reliable evidence. Beyond naturally remaining open to the possibility I will also readily admit that I would like very much for sasquatches to exist as I'm sure you'll agree that would be pretty darn cool (to be frank).

After lurking at the BFF for two years I joined the JREF forum as a fence sitter regarding sasquatch as I wanted to educate myself as much as possible about evidence that could withstand critical scrutinization and it seemed an appropriate environment. I'm guessing you probably disagree with that assessment which is certainly understandable given how vociferous some members criticisms of your efforts regarding sasquatch might have been. I myself have on a number of occasions suggested that the challenge of applying your professional skills to a subject that you had a deep and abiding interest in as a youth might lead to some extent of not being completely neutral when evaluating the evidence. I know you must rail at such suggestions and if I have offended you I apologize. I hope you appreciate that such a surmation isn't exactly unreasonable given the fact that my access to the evidence supporting sasquatch is obviously nothing compared to yours.

This brings me to the point of this mail and I apologize for the lengthy exposition. Alleged sasquatch prints displaying what may appear to be dermatoglyphics represents as I'm sure you agree a pedigree of evidence that while of course not as conclusive as a type specimen or hair, tissue, or fecal samples of one is still of very high quality and if confirmed to in fact be primate dermatoglyphics it would go a very long way in favour of a real animal (though some proponents might argue that). These alleged dermals are the subject of much current debate at the JREF.

In support of these dermal claims Jimmy Chilcutt in his involvement with you has staked his reputation on his pronouncement that these features are in fact that of an unclassified primate. Meanwhile, as you have acknowledged in your recent book the work of Matt Crowley concerning dessication ridges and other casting artifacts deserves consideration as well. In our debate at the JREF I have raised what as become a central question regarding these alleged dermatoglyphics which has yet to be answered and is in my opinion, though quite simple, extremely significant in terms of the veracity of actual dermal versus dessication ridges in these casts which is as follows:

Can anyone anywhere clearly demonstrate in regards to alledged dermatoglyphic sasquatch print casts at least two separate casts from a successive trackway displaying matching (not similar) dermal features (ridge flow patterns of friction skin, scarring, flexion creases, etc.)?

Since I initially posed this question it has been suggested to me (by a member of the JREF and BFF who goes by the handle 'LAL' with whom I believe you've had prior correspondence) that in your collection you are in possession of two such casts, one of which I believe is the Onion Mountain cast labeled CA-20 and have addressed the issue on page 256 of LMS (I must admit I have yet to read your book though I'm now having it delivered). It has been established that such a demonstration is not to be found in the book and therefore it is to you that we must look for an answer.

I don't think it necessary to overly emphasize the importance of this question given that were such a demonstration made it would effectively discount Crowley's dessication ridge argument and I must say that I find it puzzling that the issue hasn't been addressed earlier if such casts do indeed exist. If you are in possession of such casts I would humbly implore that a demonstration be made as it would silence many who are skeptical on the matter. I personally (though in a humourous manner at the time) have stated at the JREF that were such a demonstration made available that I would renounce my skepticism and return to being an ardent proponent for what little that is worth. Certainly you can see the value of such a demonstration in addressing skeptics. Any light that you would be able and willing to shed on the subject would be greatly appreciated. I again thank you for any time that you spend or have spent on this matter.

In closing though I'm aware you have stated elsewhere that posting on the JREF would not be worth your time and appreciate the reason for such sentiment I would invite you to reconsider this position. I will be opening a thread there in which I will post this mail and with your permission a response should you be able to find time to make the effort to do so. I will also be petitioning in this thread for only members to participate who wish to engage in respectful discussion of sasquatch evidence with yourself and to remain considerate of that when posing any questions to you. I think you might find yourself glad that you did should you choose to reconsider.

Best regards,
(my real name).

P.S. I would be remiss were I to forget to make mention of the fact that LAL has asked that I include a query on her behalf about whether or not you would be willing to sell copies of the casts which I am inquiring about should they exist.
 
Hey kitakaze, my rude and nasty friend.....THANK YOU for your post...#1104....it's a skeptical, slippery work of art!
I'll be working with it for a while...and with your previous works of "slippery art" to summarize your complete lack of substance in this debate.
And I do mean COMPLETE.
You've shown very nicely how questions can be dodged, and how intelligent debates are NOT carried out.
kitakaze wrote:
Originally Posted by SweatyYeti
I answered your questions.
Now you're the one having a problem answering questions.
How about answering the ones I asked you a couple of days ago....
I might continue humoring your little woo-woo games more willingly if your questions you refer to weren't so incredibly stupid.
A play taken right from RayG's book...
"I can't answer your logically flawed questions."

Keys to winning a debate with a skeptic.....
Key#1.....Ask them questions. Notice the silence. :)
Were they actually watching a bear walk upright through a cow pasture, and only later she misremembered it and thought they were watching a Bigfoot?
You're the one that keeps finding bear as the only alternative, why don't you tell us what 'they' actually saw?
Actually....I don't give a bear misidentification even the slightest probability of being what occured in this case.
Why don't YOU suggest another PROBABLE or likely candidate for a misidentification...and tell us why it's a likely explanation?

(Answer....because you can't, kitakaze. ;) )

Can you provide any quotes from me, where I INSIST that someone else provide other PROBABLE explanations?
There are none where you use the word 'insist' but apparently...
"But apparantly" you're WRONG AGAIN, kitakaze. :D
SweatyYeti:
I have asked for other LIKELY explanations...but so far, nobody...including you...have provided any.
When will you begin to understand that given the extreme lack of verified information that we have concerning Joyce's claim that the best we can do is guess and that 'she really saw a bigfoot' is unfounded speculation? You truly are too far gone.
And when will you provide another LIKELY explanation, kitaklueless? Absolutely NEVER.

To this point you've provided nothing other than insults and babble.
 
Sweaty, as you can see the adults are continuing on with matters related to sasquatch evidence so forgive me for losing interest in your silliness. I would encourage you to think carefully why nobody else is interested in assisting your idle speculations.
 
Conclusions on their affiliation were reached after examination of reliable evidence.

No evidence of similar quality is avaliable for bigfoot, as far as I know.


Already discussed ad nauseaum here.

So why do you bring it up again?

There are scientists working in the field at North America's "bigfoot country". They are not researching bigfoot, but I think its quite reasonable to assume that if these animals were real, some reliable evidence would have surfaced.

There was a discussion on BFF about game cams being used in a wildcat survey picking up something they couldn't identify. Seems the info was promptly pulled from the Internet, but possibly there are shots of something that couldn't be identified. A couple of researchers have noted possible activity seems to stop when the game cams go up.

As I've noted, there didn't seem to be any scientific investigations of anything going on in one of the hottest areas in the country, although I did meet a couple of Spotted Owl callers near my gate once. They were students. Now that it's known wolves aren't extinct in the Southern Cascades after all, maybe something else might be found.

But occasional glimpses and more indistinct footprint finds even by wildlife experts (got those already) aren't going to do much to budge science.

Do you really need to be specifically looking for a 3m tall ape to find it? Were all the witnesses (many of whom claim to have seen them at areas that by now way can be considered as inaccessible) looking for bigfeet?

Most weren't. I can think of several investigators who were.

And the reliable evidence includes one of the below?
-Fossil remains of a bipedal primate (not H. sapiens) from North America within a time frame coincident with human colonization (maybe even a non-bipedal chimp-sized ape of the right age and place would do);
-DNA analisys from blood, hair or scat samples pointing towards an unknown primate of the Homininae or Ponginae subfamilies at North America;

Got over a dozen samples of hair identified as "primate" or unknown that match no known mammal, but do match each other. Scat may yield DNA from what's been eaten, but not from the animal doing the eating. The scat analyzed from the Skookum site didn't anything usefull, even elk, BTW.

-High-quality stills or footage from a reliable source (biologist or wildlife photographer whose reputation would be ruined if caught involved somehow in a hoax). Depending on the circunstances (for example, someone else manages to take more pics or footage) it could even be "proof".

At least one team is working on that.

Any of the above could be enough to warrant a full-scale scientific investigation (whatever that actually means). He´s got some of the above?

Fahrenbach has the hair, I believe. Meldrum has close to 200 casts, including an "anatomically correct" cast of an impression of female buttocks.

Again, there's enough already to warrant a full-scale scientific investigation, whatever that means - has been for years. I'm not saying it's "hard" evidence, but, as Dahinden said, those casts are pretty hard.

It will probably take habituation to get the kind of evidence you want (unless someone gets a clear shot). And that will take funding for long stays in the field. How long did it take Goodall to get close to "her" chimps?

Or just footprint casts, a short and shaky movie suspected of being a fraud, blurred pictures, sighting reports, myths interpreted outside their original context...

The PGF was shaky because Roger was running, and, at one point, trying to wind the camera.

You probably are quite aware of these articles:
http://www.bigfootencounters.com/hoaxes/marx_footage.htm

I posted that one on BFF a coupl of days ago, as matter of fact. It's one of my favorites.


Yep, and when Mike Dennett showed up on BFF he admitted he'd faked the identity of the person who faked the Indiana cast. There was no mention of name and gender being changed in the article.

He bases most of his claim of Freeman fakery on that Good Morning America interview where Freeman said he'd faked prints to fool the neighbors. Dahinden never made the "left, left" remark and I was able to post part of the review, later pulled, where Meldrum discussed that. Dennett had heard about it but hadn't seen it. He was a perfect gentleman on the board, BTW, unlike some of his supporters.

Brian Smith has said Freeman embellished real tracks, but that he (Smith) had found evidence in the same areas Freeman did. Freeman may have faked film, but the prints seen in the 1994 footge are a match for a cast taken by people completely unassociated with Paul Freeman. There are stills from Oklahoma that look just like the hulking figure in the film. Same "costume", or is that what mature male sasquatches look like?

Fahrenbach thought the infamous sample that turned out to be synthetic was a "natural contaminant". People bring things like that in just because they don't know what they are. (Yes, I know Fahrenbach misidentified a bovine hair sample. Bovine hair sometimes lacks a medulla too. Even Einstein was wrong on at least a couple of things.)

And despite of it you are willing to accept evidence produced by these individuals?

Where the evidence holds up, yes. Got some evidence Green, Abbott, Summerlin, Meldrum, Akin, Heryford, Closner, or the other rangers casting at the site of Freeman's sighting, e.g., faked anything?

Please check this quote from post 1074:

Please check this quote from Desertyeti from 2004:

"This has probably been asked before, but with all the newer folks (myself included) just tuning in, I thought it'd be interesting to find out:

Just what piece(s) of evidence most convinces you that such a thing as Sasquatch exists in the face of all opposition?

For me, it's a combination of the Patterson film and trackway plus the dermatoglyphics found on certain prints. These two data sets seem to continue to stand up to all scientific scrutiny, regardless of who looks at them. They especially come out well when picked at by skeptics, since anyone who knows what they're talking about usually comes away either dumbfounded or resigned to the prospect that a huge non-human hominid calls North America home.

Anyone else?"

http://www.bigfootforums.com/index.php?showtopic=6669&st=0&p=133248&#entry133248

And in all these years, defenders of PGF completely failed to prove it is not a hoax. More and more fishy details are found...

Fishy? Like those lines that show up on real animals? Gimlin not seeing Patterson's horse fall on him? DeAtely not remembering how the film was sent?

If you want fishy, read Long. In all these years debunkers have completely failed to prove it's a hoax.

Regarding the IM argument, I could ask why PGF defenders ignore the fact that human body proportions can be easily altered by costumes?

Still waiting on Dfoot who thought it would be easy. In 40 years no one's done it. The BBC's best effort has already been posted. There's a whole thread on this on BFF, complete with .gifs I grabbed from The Mysterious Monsters where they were actually trying to make sasquatch suits.

Its an extremely obvious flaw. I can't help but question the objectivity (regarding the bigfoot subject) of anyone who uses such argument. Even if they are PhDs in primate anatomy.

Green noted it first, actually. Heironimus claimed he wore his own clothes under the suit. Fact is, huge amounts of padding would have been needed. The shoulder joints are a foot farther part than on a man of comparable size and the IM index is between 80-90 (88 from the digitalization), not the sort of thing that could be faked using simple extensions.

And then there's that gait. The movement is smooth and natural, like a real animal. The muscles move correctly.

If it's so easy to build a suit with all that padding, prosthetics and realistic fur, why haven't we seen one yet?

Can be faked, interpreted with how can I say... Too much enthusiasm... Not to mention that the weight determinations I am aware of are far from satisfactory. I've already exposed why. Scroll down some pages or perform a search if you want to see the arguments again.

I don't. Glickman used a formula.

And barely had time to have a second look at what their brains interpreted as being a bigfoot, and details may be later aded based on a template readily avaliable...

I've lived in the US all my life, in five different states. I can't say I've noticed Americans being into mythology (other than in their religious traditions). Maybe things are different in Brazil. Again, point me to studies that back up your argument.

Maybe. I guess is that if they appear, it will be a de ja vú of Biscardi's bigfoot hand.

Why do you keep bringing that up? I never have. Biscardi's credibility is zip.

It makes me wonder why bigfoot investigators are not tracking them...

Do you know what bigfoot investigators are doing?

DY studied a copy of the cast with enough detail. He has expertise in a related field (ichnology), exposed his methodology, data gathered and conclusions. The work seems quite reasonable for me.

You've seen the photos? The copy is not museum quality and the photo is clearly much less detailed than the photo of the original, which reportedly does not do justice to the original.

DY said, "Here's Jeff's take on it as of May, 2006.

I of course, disagree with him as do the people I've consulted with who work quite a bit with elk, deer, and other ungulate traces. We're just not as verbose! (Sorry Jeff!)


THE SKOOKUM BIGFOOT BODY CASTING, 2000, IS STILL A RATHER
CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC. DON'T YOU THINK THE IMPRESSION LENDS ITSELF TO MULTIPLE INTERPRETATIONS?

Certainly multiple interpretations have been offered by various individuals, some without the benefit of ever having examined the cast. The only alternate interpretation, excluding hoaxing, initially worthy of serious consideration was that the imprint was made by an elk. However, this hypothesis was readily falsified by comparing the impression to those
left by elk, to their anatomy, hair patterns, and behavior. At this point, no reasonable argument can be made for elk as the responsible candidate. I found it curious how readily many individuals adopted an opinion that the reconstructed posture was quite unreasonable for a large primate. Rick Noll recently filmed a gorilla at the Seattle Zoo feeding in precisely this posture, right down to the heel plants. It ate selectively and sloppily as was also indicated at the site."

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=59728&page=2

I've seen the gorilla movie. Jeff is right about that.

Is DY a specialist in paleoichnology or neoichnology?

Much of his argument rests on hair flow, with 60% missing from the copy, according to Caddy, and and a misidentified joint print.

Why should I consider his conclusions are not as exact as Meldrum's? Because DY does not use a mustache?

Because, to my knowlege, he hasn't seen the original or tried to tried to fit actual pieces of elk to it. He's content with his experts taking a few seconds to look at photos of the copy and say "Yeah, it's an ungulate". That's what you want to see too, isn't it?
Because he has not exposed his conclusions on National TV? Or you are again trying to use an appeal to authority? I tought we had already considered such thing as useless...

Maybe you did. Did you have a mentor? Did you respect his opinions? Were they to be thrown out just because he was an authority?

Swindler is a professor Emeritus, the author of the standard work on primate anatomy. He's a giant in a related field. He examined the original quite thoroughly. He just might know what he's talking about.

People see thunderbirds, Jesus, little grey men, chupacabras, the Virgin Mary, ogopogos, ghosts, etc...

As I said before:
Plaese, don´t waste time trying to sell
-Casts from Ivan Marx
-A film that may (quite probably is IMHO) be a hoax
-Blobfeet
-Casts that may be hoaxes or misidentifications
-Sighting reports
-Disappearing body parts
-A hand found at a dumpyard
-The cast of an elk lay
-Interpretation of myths
as reliable.

I'm not buying.

And I'm not selling. If you don't like what I have to say, stop reading my posts.
 
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Well they could be, I have never said I think Tube is completely wrong, some of these features described as dermal ridges could be a casting artifact, but all of my attempts to create these "artifacts" have failed.

Your question is exactly why I decided to do casting experiments using soil from Onion Mountain. It should also be mentioned there are features on this cast that have yet to be explained, and as far as I know Tube has not addressed this specific issue yet - if I missed it, then my apologies but I have not seen him describe how this feature could happen.

The only thing I am sure of at this point is this - casting dermal ridges in the soil from Onion Mountain is possible, as I have casted my own. I will continue to have this opinion until the day comes I am able to recreate the "Crowley Lines".
Thank you Melissa, just a few questions. Do think Tube's initial finding of dessication ridges was based on a bias towards the evidence? Has anyone else been able to reproduce these features? What are these features you mention concerning the OM cast?
 
Has anyone else been able to reproduce these features?

I've reproduced them (quite accidentally) on a variety of casts made in Hydrostone plaster (a mixture of gypsum and Portland cement). All that's required is a fine-grained water-absorbing (not necessarily dry) material like dry clay moist gypsum-rich mud, clay with selenite, etc. I can post some photos if anyone's burning with desire to see them.
 
[qimg]http://photos2.meetupstatic.com/photos/member/5/e/1/a/thumb_1224090.jpeg[/qimg]



Why is this a surprise? Tube posted the link to the web page on his site. I posted part of the page with the link. Don't you guys check these things out?

The link was on his BFF profile a couple of years ago. I checked it out then, found I'd been doing battle with a PhD and felt about like I did when I found out someone I'd just beaten in Chess was an International Grandmaster.
You know, Lu, you look pretty much just like I pictured. I mean that in a nice way. I'm sure someone's imagining me as some yakuza thug but I'm really quit nice (unless you're Sweaty or Lyndon).

Anyway, I still don't get point of posting the photo. I'd love to talk bigfoot over a beer with DY. (Green tea if it's you.)
 
I've reproduced them (quite accidentally) on a variety of casts made in Hydrostone plaster (a mixture of gypsum and Portland cement). All that's required is a fine-grained water-absorbing (not necessarily dry) material like dry clay moist gypsum-rich mud, clay with selenite, etc. I can post some photos if anyone's burning with desire to see them.
Oh yeah, of course not you, stupid. JK:D Melissa?

ETA: I have what may be described as a burning desire.
 
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I get it now!
LAL's got a crush on me (even keeps old photos of me from 2001:o ) and that's why she's so irrationally upset by my scientific analyses (and refusal to respond to her love notes).

Just what I need: another Scott Herriott.

Sorry to puncture your male ego, but aside from the fact I don't rob cradles, you are decidedly not my type.

Sorry baby, I've already told you I'm happily married.;)

No you didn't, but I'm glad you are. I hope you can still say that twenty years from now.

Nice pony, though. I used to breed and race American Standardbreds. My foals were bigger than that and undoubtedly faster. ;)

Now, just out of curiousity, what would you have done to one of your students if he (or she) had given you a source for a photo, you checked the source, found it wasn't there, and then said student told you you were wrong, and tried to wiggle out by saying, yes, but it's like another photo?

I'd like to check the site you apparently got it from. Is there something wrong with that?
 
You know, Lu, you look pretty much just like I pictured. I mean that in a nice way. I'm sure someone's imagining me as some yakuza thug but I'm really quit nice (unless you're Sweaty or Lyndon).

Anyway, I still don't get point of posting the photo. I'd love to talk bigfoot over a beer with DY. (Green tea if it's you.)

Ditto.
I don't understand Lu's problem either (except for the obvious and major crush), but she clearly has an overly-inflated sense of self. If she'd been in my intro geology classes when I was a university instructor, I suspect she'd be one of the older (sorry, "non-traditional") students who consistently did poorly on exams, but still somehow thought she knew more than the instructor. There's always one or two of them around.;)

But here's another one of me in the field, this time holding a cast of a Fiddler crab (Uca sp.) burrow and casts of bird feeding traces from a mudflat in southern Texas:

p.s.:
Because, to my knowlege, he hasn't seen the original or tried to tried to fit actual pieces of elk to it. He's content with his experts taking a few seconds to look at photos of the copy and say "Yeah, it's an ungulate". That's what you want to see too, isn't it?
Wrong again as usual. I provided a full explanation of how I did fit an elk into the cast specimen I saw. And yes, I am an expert in paleo ichnology and very well-versed in neoichnology (in fact these are basic skills of my job). Don't forget, you're the one who relies on your "experts'" opinions, I actually do research on my own and form my own opinions. You just ignore this as always...maybe getting a bit senile in your old age?
 
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You know, Lu, you look pretty much just like I pictured. I mean that in a nice way. I'm sure someone's imagining me as some yakuza thug but I'm really quit nice (unless you're Sweaty or Lyndon).

Since you're from BC originally I'd have thought you look like John Bindernagel. :D

Anyway, I still don't get point of posting the photo.

I'd already posted the link and even asked about the nail polish. I think I've shown the futility of just posting links. Who besides me checks links?

I enjoyed the debate with DY two years ago (and no, I didn't save the photo; it's from tube's link); he was less, uh, colorful then. I'll post the link to the debate when I find it. (But who will click on it?) It's the one where he said a researcher should always examine originals wherever possible.

(Green tea if it's you.)

The stuff they sell us in bags is nothing like the real deal. I asked for ocha last time I was in a Japanese resturant, Benihana style near Asheville, and the waitress had no idea what I was talking about. It was great though,very nutty and naturally a little sweet. It went beautifully with the tempura.

I remember saki from when I was in Japan. That stuff can be pretty wicked, as I recall. Those little cups were really frustrating for a two-fisted drinker. Kirin was a lot easier, imbibingwise.
 
Since you're from BC originally I'd have thought you look like John Bindernagel. :D
Actually, I was born in Calgary but hey, nobody's perfect. I only lived there till I was two and raised in Victoria. If I looked like Bindernagel I could forget any photo shoots. (hey, there's a tidbit!) It shouldn't be hard finding a photo of me to post if one wanted.
I'd already posted the link and even asked about the nail polish. I think I've shown the futility of just posting links. Who besides me checks links?
Hey, I check links, dang it. Not shy of nail polish, also.
I asked for ocha last time I was in a Japanese resturant, Benihana style near Asheville, and the waitress had no idea what I was talking about. It was great though,very nutty and naturally a little sweet. It went beautifully with the tempura.

I remember saki from when I was in Japan. That stuff can be pretty wicked, as I recall. Those little cups were really frustrating for a two-fisted drinker. Kirin was a lot easier, imbibingwise.
If you're just asking for tea in general, say 'ocha', if you're after green tea, say 'macha'. If you thought sake was something you should've tried shouchu. That would put some hair... nevermind. I prefer Kirin happoushu.
 
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If she'd been in my intro geology classes when I was a university instructor, I suspect she'd be one of the older (sorry, "non-traditional") students who consistently did poorly on exams, but still somehow thought she knew more than the instructor. There's always one or two of them around.

I've always done very well on exams, even recently, much as I loathe taking them. You strike me as a teacher who would rather ridicule the students than actually see that they learn something.

Was there much celebration when you left?

<snip>

p.s.: Wrong again as usual. I provided a full explanation of how I did fit an elk into the cast specimen I saw.

Using actual pieces of elk? I must have missed that.

And yes, I am an expert in paleo ichnology and very well-versed in neoichnology (in fact these are basic skills of my job). Don't forget, you're the one who relies on your "experts'" opinions,

And my own eyes, which can see clearly from the photo in Murphy's book, what Caddy, et al, are talking about. I can also see a superficial resemblance to an elk lay.

I actually do research on my own and form my own opinions. You just ignore this as always...maybe getting a bit senile in your old age

Not at all. Not to brag, but I've been getting some fan mail from posters recently complimenting me on my great memory and telling me I'm a genius. Needless to say, none of them were from you.

I never did get an adequate explanation for how the elk managed to get out of the imprint without messing up the impressions that were made by something being lifted straight up.

You posted stills and I posted a .gif:

post-1339-1155054690.gif


http://www.bigfootforums.com/index.php?showtopic=15671&st=275

I nominated the thread for one of the best ever, must-read for newbies on BFF. I said it has great stuff, no matter which side a person's on. I'm surprised it didn't get five stars.

Why do you fit your elk photo to a photo of the copy instead of a picture of the original?
 
I have just sent Meldrum the e-mail. Some of you might think it a bit long-winded and that just sending the sig version would be better but for myself I thought it was extra exposition was worth it and I really would like to encourage him to post here.

Well, I think, since he's busy man, you'd be more likely to get a reply to a short, to-the-point e-mail. An inquiry about the casts might at least have elicited a response regarding availbility and price. Photos would be good. I'm afraid by mentioning me, you've queered it. He's already stated his opinion of the "other lists" I post on.

But, we can always hope. I would like nothing more than to see the academics (and former academic) go at it, here or anywhere.
 
I never did get an adequate explanation for how the elk managed to get out of the imprint without messing up the impressions that were made by something being lifted straight up.
And we never got an adequate explanation of how a Bigfoot would manage the same move..

Spare us Noll's gorilla movie, which shows a gorilla in a reclined position, and reaching for a piece of food.
We do not see the gorilla lay down or get up; nor do we see the impression the
gorilla made while accomplishing this ..

P.S.

Where is a photo of a real elk lay, that matches Meldrum's drawing ?
 
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