Lu,
You got me on that “largely nocturnal”; I don’t know what that means. Is it basic bigfooting where you just pick and choose what you want then throw it into a made-up category? Primates and the use of facial expressions as a form of communicating seems to have flown a little over your head.
Think about all the reports that mention facial expressions, for instance. . .
“he made many human like facial expressions”,
“while squinting toward Jones with a stern facial expression.”,
“I was close enough I could see his facial expressions”,
“The detail of the animal's movement, facial expression and breasts captured on the film make it the most believable evidence to date”,
“but his facial expression was not very convincing that he had understood!”,
“Mouth is closed, lips drawn tight and slightly apart. Eyes are usually unsteady and darting about. This behavior is usually displayed toward human observers and not other apes. ( According to some researchers, this is the expression displayed by the animal in the Patterson film).”
. . .now ask yourself what possible reasons could there be for a nocturnal (or even as you so eloquently put “largely nocturnal”) animal to exhibit facial expressions? Bigfoot is described as displaying the vast majority of its activity at night (nocturnal), hence all the frickin snipe hunts. Maybe you should read some Ian Tattersall in reference to cathemeral activity and then we can have a discussion about the different meanings of diurnal, nocturnal, crepuscular and cathemeral. Google the above quotes if you want the links.
Lu, do you really think that you can learn me anything about elk and deer traits that I don’t already know? Deer and elk aren’t largely anything. Last time I checked deer and elk were crepuscular. Learn about real animals first, then we’ll discuss fantasy animals if you like. Check factors like habitat transitions, daily, monthly, seasonal cycles, read papers/books, sit in on and/or read field studies of collared animals where you can view a 24 hour cycle of pulse rates, hangout with big-game guides or professional trackers, meet local game wardens, tag along with field biologists then add all that information to your own practical experience, oh wait a minute that’s me, never mind. BTW, during modern firearm seasons throw everything out the window, neither deer nor elk act very natural during this time period.
FYI, at night most elk and deer pretty much just hangout, graze and ruminate, this doesn’t make them nocturnal. Generally speaking about 70-80% of their daily activity (24 hour period) will be spent during 30% percent of that day, 0430–0830 and 1830-2230, AKA Crepuscular, exact times will vary with the seasons. During the day they’ll head for cover, sack-out for a while and do most of their ruminating. There’s other bimodal distribution on things like conception dates, foraging habits, blah, blah, blah. This stuff is mostly cut and dry, I believe I have used the term habitual before. Animals are habitual once they have a territory it’s point a to point b, point b to point c, point c back to point a. Survival of the species equals food, sleep, sex end of story.
If bigfoot is real it’s alien to the animal kingdom.
m