LTC8K6
Penultimate Amazing
Why is the heel of the foot in the Laverty photo/cast terraced or stepped instead of smooth?
The obvious answer is that the heel was pressed into the substrate more than once.Why is the heel of the foot in the Laverty photo/cast terraced or stepped instead of smooth?
I'd like to add something that goes back to page 34 or abouts.
The Adirondaks in New York aren't the only place in New York a "big hairy creature" was reported historically. In Putnam County during the Revolutionary War, there was an "officially" documented sighting.
I wonder what else it could have been???
Yes, that's habitat. Researchers are there. First, that sighting report is from the Lake Cowichan area. Lake Cowichan is on the southeast part of the island. My grandparents have had a home on Lake Cowichan since before I was born and I spent much of my childhood there in the forest. Didn't see any bigfoots, though.From my earlier post:
""Vancouver Island is roughly divided between a rugged, wet west coast and a drier, more rolling east coast by the Vancouver Island Ranges, which run down most of the length of the island. The highest point in these ranges and on the island is the Golden Hinde, at 2195 m or 7200'. Located near the centre of Vancouver Island in the 250,000 ha or 620,000 acre Strathcona Provincial Park, it is part of a group of peaks that include the only glaciers on the island, the largest of which is the Comox Glacier. The west coast shoreline is rugged, and in many places mountainous, characterised by its many fjords, bays, and inlets."
That's habitat.
Most sightings are from the west coast, yes? Here's a recent one on logging road:
http://www.bfro.net/GDB/show_report.asp?id=15274
First, welcome to the forum, Tony.
You wouldn't happen to have a (preferably primary) source for that, would you? Because it sounds like a spurious newspaper story, with the fake old-timey language, and not a military source.
Page 52"Has Sarah Good any familiar?"
"Yes, a yeller bird. It sucks her between her fingers. And Sarah Osburn has a thing with a head like a woman, and it has two wings."
("Abigail Williams, who lives with her uncle, the Rev. Master Parris, here testified that she did see the same creature, and it turned into the shape of Goody Osburn.")
"Tituba further said that she had also seen a hairy animal with Goody Osburn, that had only two legs, and walked like a man. And that she saw Sarah Good, last Saturday, set a wolf upon Elizabeth Hubbard."
The wild population listing in your link of less than 25 individuals is an obvious error. I suspect someone forgot a zero between the two and five. Let me show you, from the link:I'm finding Marmot population estimates from fewer than 25 to just over 205.
"Marmots are found in colonies in alpine and sub-alpine areas with steep slopes, meadows and rocky debris. Each colony usually consists of one adult male, one or more adult females, and a number of young marmots. They construct burrows where they hibernate during the winter, hide from predators and bear their young."
http://www.wptc.org/wildlife/marmot.cfm
They do not range solitarily over hundreds of miles. IOW, they're not hard to find.
If there are less than 25 individuals in the wild but they are found on 25 sites on 13 mountains then that's less than 1 individual per colony and therefore not a colony. You can see that's quite impossible. The links I gave have the correct information.Current range: Over the past few decades, the species has disappeared from about two thirds of its original range. It is now found in just 25 sites on 13 mountains.
Estimated population: The Vancouver Island marmot is one of the most endangered species in Canada, and the world's most endangered mammal. Although the population in the mid-80s was estimated to be over 300, currently there are less than 25 individuals in the wild.
The wild population listing in your link of less than 25 individuals is an obvious error. I suspect someone forgot a zero between the two and five. Let me show you, from the link:If there are less than 25 individuals in the wild but they are found on 25 sites on 13 mountains then that's less than 1 individual per colony and therefore not a colony. You can see that's quite impossible. The links I gave have the correct information.
Population trends.
LAL, can we have a nice clear look at these varying toe positions?How did wooden feet make varying toe positions, Bill?
Thanks, Orthoptera. Good eye. LAL, I apologize, I'm wrong in thinking the current wild population is in the triple digits. I'm also seeing a wild population of less than 40 individuals as of 2005 which I think can be attributed to captive breeding efforts. The massive decline has to do with major colony die-offs. BTW, in your link have a look at the 2003 field report and tell me that isn't some far more pristine sasquatch habitat than many of the scenery pictures you've provided in the past.For what it's worth, Kitakaze, your link shows about 25 individuals (as of 2001)
[qimg]http://www.marmots.org/images/00size.gif[/qimg]
and notes "the 1998 population probably comprised fewer than 100 individuals, divided more-or-less equally among natural meadows and clearcuts."
Did any of your links say specifically Marmot researchers have found no evidence of sasquatches?
I see via quote that Lu has asked me some sort of question.
I'm tempted to ask, "What toes?" and pretend I don't know what she's talking about. I won't stoop that low, though...
It's amazing that Lu wants to talk about varying toe positions....
Absolutely amazing.
If we show that toe positions don't vary a millimeter, like with those tracks on the road that John Green is so pointedly measuring, it doesn't matter.
Somehow the sameness is overlooked.
My guess is that Lu can't show us any varying toe positions in sequential tracks.
With respect to Desert Yeti, in keeping with what I feel has been a general direction of this very productive thread in terms of addressing major fallbacks and amorphous standard assumptions of bigfoot proponents I would now like to suggest another line of scrutiny. Thanks to tube's hard efforts we've seen clearly how such experts as Jimmy Chilcutt could be so wrong in his assessment of 'dermatoglyphics'. It should go without saying that Chilcutt has no ground to claim expertise when it comes to examining plaster casts or alledged bigfoot prints in general.
When confronted with the reliable evidence produced by tube's efforts it is the standard fallback for proponents to speak of the morphology and characteristics of 'the living foot' (ie flex, toe spread, etc) and Chilcutt's observations thereof. I have elsewhere pointed out that toe spread is no difficult task to achieve but I would now like to invite proponents to show us these very clear examples of successive tracks displaying clear toe movement that is congruent with a living foot and not easily attributable to a hoaxing method. It is my suspicion that this 'living foot' talk is yet another one of these amorphous myths in the manner of the 'where's the dead bears?' type.
The obvious answer is that the heel was pressed into the substrate more than once.