Latest Bigfoot "evidence"

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Could have been wounded and wandered off to die there.

Then everything that wandered by worked on it, from fox to porkies.
 
These bones were found about 3 miles from the nearest main road, in a very deep bog, so I don't think that is a possibility in this case.

1.It's not even possible in your mind that a deer could have had its leg broken in an auto accident and manage to hobble 3 miles to a secluded location where it died? (That's assuming you are correct in your 3-mile distance estimate, of course.)

2. The deer could have broken its leg in a slip and fall while running through the forest. I assume you have some downed wood, damp rocks, etc. in the vicinity.

3. If you do have a spiral break in the bone from torque applied to it, this wouldn't have to have been the result of something with thumbs twisting with both hands. A coyote, wolf, or dog could make such a break with their jaws if the bone was somehow wedged into a crevice.

Off the top of my head, these three possibilities would be vastly more likely than a hungry squatchie twisting the long bones to get the marrow inside. (Even if bigfoots did exist and did hunt/scavenge deer, it seems to me it'd be easier to just crack the bone open rather than twisting. I'd also suspect that all of the long bones would have been twisted that way, rather than just the one.)
 
1.It's not even possible in your mind that a deer could have had its leg broken in an auto accident and manage to hobble 3 miles to a secluded location where it died? (That's assuming you are correct in your 3-mile distance estimate, of course.)

2. The deer could have broken its leg in a slip and fall while running through the forest. I assume you have some downed wood, damp rocks, etc. in the vicinity.

3. If you do have a spiral break in the bone from torque applied to it, this wouldn't have to have been the result of something with thumbs twisting with both hands. A coyote, wolf, or dog could make such a break with their jaws if the bone was somehow wedged into a crevice.

Off the top of my head, these three possibilities would be vastly more likely than a hungry squatchie twisting the long bones to get the marrow inside. (Even if bigfoots did exist and did hunt/scavenge deer, it seems to me it'd be easier to just crack the bone open rather than twisting. I'd also suspect that all of the long bones would have been twisted that way, rather than just the one.)

You never run into bigfoot bones though.
 
It is 100% possible that this deer was hit by a vehicle. When "I don't think so..." comes from a Bigfoot believer we have to be skeptical of their thoughts. You are not simply a normal curious person.

Granted, it is possible. Based upon where we found them, I believe it is highly improbable.

1.It's not even possible in your mind that a deer could have had its leg broken in an auto accident and manage to hobble 3 miles to a secluded location where it died? (That's assuming you are correct in your 3-mile distance estimate, of course.)

2. The deer could have broken its leg in a slip and fall while running through the forest. I assume you have some downed wood, damp rocks, etc. in the vicinity.

3. If you do have a spiral break in the bone from torque applied to it, this wouldn't have to have been the result of something with thumbs twisting with both hands. A coyote, wolf, or dog could make such a break with their jaws if the bone was somehow wedged into a crevice.

Off the top of my head, these three possibilities would be vastly more likely than a hungry squatchie twisting the long bones to get the marrow inside. (Even if bigfoots did exist and did hunt/scavenge deer, it seems to me it'd be easier to just crack the bone open rather than twisting. I'd also suspect that all of the long bones would have been twisted that way, rather than just the one.)

Legs, both are broken.

Why would you even use the term ' spiral fracture ' ?

That's what they looked like when I did a search. Please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong. Again, see question 1.
 
NL, don't let denialists talk you out of this. You've seen Bigfoot and you know it could do this kind of damage.
 
So your opinion is that the legs were broken and the deer was killed right there in the bog?
 
Awesome, I will read the entire document when I get them time.

I would put that on the Front Burner, before you do something silly, and go on a website and claim you found deer bones that could have only been broken by a Giant, Hairy, Unclassified Primate, with Bipedial locomotion and some godawful habit of breaking an ungulate's thigh bones in spiral fashion, for no apparent reason other than Kicks and Giggles.
 
I still haven't seen the deer bone picture. Can anyone see what he is even talking about? I mean he even PM'd me the link to it, and I still don't see anything.
 
Can you see this, Drewbot?

picture.php
 
I mean this sincerly; what makes this a spiral fracture instead of just a broken bone? Are greenstck fractures not horizontal, often without even a seperation of the bone?
 
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