William Parcher
Show me the monkey!
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2005
- Messages
- 27,493
I would agree with this, although I'd compress the time period to about 200 years. Before that, the scary stories of a large hairy beast were not ones where people would go out and search for evidence.
You can't compress it to 200 years if you think that Bigfoot lived in the East. This is where Europeans settled and they did have guns. "Searching for evidence" has nothing to do with spontaneously shooting a giant hairy man-ape. Anybody could come across a Bigfoot body at any time.
Over the last 200 years, as scientific exploration expanded, then there was interest in these beasts. Footprints, markings on trees, and still more stories continued. More scientists were willing to search over the last 50 years in a more rigorous environment. The best evidence is still the footprints.
The past 200 years can be used in argument if you think that Bigfoot was limited to the West (or Northwest). Again they could be shot or found dead.
And if we know where some of these things live, I agree that we SHOULD be able to get better physical evidence.
We should have already had that even long before the PGF of 1967 or the Crew cast of 1958.