Thats great news, combining UFO's and Cryptozoology will increase the credibility of both
right ?
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Now that's comedy!
http://www.bigfootencounters.com/interviews/peter2.htmhowever naive it sounds today it occurred to me that if you substituted the word 'UFO' for 'Bigfoot' in the dialogues of Bigfoot witnesses, the descriptions sounded or 'felt' eerily similar to the flying saucer and occupant encounters already well-known to UFO aficionados.
...What journal is he talking about? ...
Loren posted this:
[Update: I am disappointed to see Ms. "I Doubt It" felt compelled to post a response in which, like most debunkers and scoftics, she wants me to do all the work and point out all the mistakes in her previous posting. There are many, but let me note one, via a question: How did you miss that a peer-reviewed journal does exist, and that Meldrum and others have published peer-reviewed cryptozoological articles?]
What journal is he talking about? There are none active that I know about. But, he's giving me nice traffic. I never had more than when The Anomalist would send huffy Bigfooters my way. Too bad I don't have a "Donate via PAY PAL" link on my page like he does.
Cryptofool Coleman up to his usual foo foo, desperately trying to validate his crypto-gobbledy-gook so people might be more inclined to buy one of his books and learn more about the 11 species of Bigfoot in North America or donate to the museum (home crypto swag collection).
Sorry, Loren. Cryptozoology is still not a science and never will be. Same goes for your hominology dreck or whatever else you want to stick a pipe in your mouth and say "-ology" after. No schools teach cryptozoology, there are no degrees in it, and no scientists being paid to research it. Not one cryptozoologist, which is a sophisticated way to say "fortean addict", has ever made a single contribution to zoology, biology, or any other of the natural sciences. I would suggest busting open the museum donation piggy bank and seeing if you can take some online zoology courses. Here, I'll lend a hand...
http://www.zoology.msu.edu/online-courses.html
Same goes for your hominology dreck or whatever else you want to stick a pipe in your mouth and say "-ology" after.
Try scientificexploration.org/journal/jse_18_1_meldrum.pdf ?
Thats great news, combining UFO's and Cryptozoology will increase the credibility of both
right ?
![]()
PARCHER: Did Loren Coleman advocate that the GA Bigfoot was 'the real deal', or 'looks real' at some point? I seem to remember him going all in on it being real, but can't find the quote in Cryptomundo.
PARCHER: Did Loren Coleman advocate that the GA Bigfoot was 'the real deal', or 'looks real' at some point? I seem to remember him going all in on it being real, but can't find the quote in Cryptomundo.
Loren Coleman said:The body doesn't look exactly like people thought it would, because the Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot has been the model in our minds. However, this looks as if it is an actual apelike primate. Indeed, the gorilla-like facial features, the alleged lack of canines, and the grinding surfaces shown in the teeth suggest a bulky vegetarian with a mixture of higher primate characteristics.
Will further tests and the proposed live capture of others prove beyond a doubt that Bigfoot is a new species? Stay tuned. And read on.
The decomposition has caused the tongue to stick out from the mouth. (Or at least so it appears.)
http://www.webcitation.org/5a2AbUGG2
AtomicMysteryMonster was smart enough to web-cite the article. I went back and found it.
swnoel said:August 12th, 2008 at 8:13 pm
Loren, why do I sense that you have the goods on this and your dying to talk?
I know, you promised.
We'll just have to wait, but you can tell me, I promise I wont tell.![]()
Fhqwhgads @ Cryptomumble said:2. I do get the impression that, by and large, cryptozoology really is a hobby. Almost no one can truthfully claim to be a “professional cryptozoologist” — most researchers have to work regular jobs to pay the bills. More significantly, many of the people who, for example, go looking for bigfoot seem to have no special training or experience other than hunting (for common animals like deer).
3. If cryptozoology is a science, it appears to be one in its infancy. Cryptozoology does not seem to have a well-defined relationship with other sciences; where does it fit? Is it a subset of ethnozoology, or is it a sister science to ethnozoology? How much biology should a cryptozoologist be expected to know? If you were designing a degree in cryptozoology for a university, what would be the core courses and what would be the electives? Cryptozoology does not appear to be very well-defined in terms of either its subject matter (for instance, does it include mermaids?) or in terms of its methodology.
Loren @ Cryptomumble said:Fhqwhgads, an acknowledged “Skeptic,” (or perhaps to DWA and others, a scoftic), at least here, writes:
“I do get the impression that, by and large, cryptozoology really is a hobby. Almost no one can truthfully claim to be a “professional cryptozoologist” — most researchers have to work regular jobs to pay the bills. More significantly, many of the people who, for example, go looking for bigfoot seem to have no special training or experience other than hunting (for common animals like deer).”
Well, of course, I an not “almost no one,” I’ll have you know. LOL. Needless to say, I am a professional cryptozoologist and I have the IRS records to indicate so.