kitakaze
Resident DJ/NSA Supermole
The Olympic Peninsula is a rain forest.
We can find mosasaur fossils on Vancouver Island, but not Bigfoot. Rainforest everywhere here.
Texas is not rain forest, nor is Ohio.
The Olympic Peninsula is a rain forest.
Same line of reasoning the folks below are using...Vortigern, thank you very much. Just like I thought the fossil records are scarce.
We can find mosasaur fossils on Vancouver Island, but not Bigfoot. Rainforest everywhere here.
Texas is not rain forest, nor is Ohio.
We might consider something like a bigfoot dispersing overland from Asia to North America via the Bering Land Bridge some time in the mid-to late Pleistocene, just like several other large mammals did. If so, then such creatures must have made use (for generations) of lots of different habitats, just like the other mammals did: forests, steppe grassland, wetlands, muskeg, lakeshores, river corridors, coastlines, etc. Thus it is perfectly rational, reasonable, logical, and scientifically predictable that we should have found at least ONE bigfoot fossil amid all those others. Given that bigfoot is presumed to still be extant, it's also had 10,000–20,000 years of additional opportunity to have the remains of JUST ONE preserved and found, relative to its now extinct Pleistocene counterparts.
[1]Most of the primate fossils found are a few teeth and jawbones correct? [2]Has there been more of the skeleton found? [3]Are not most of those found in arid areas like the deserts of Africa? [4]The skeleton of Lucy was incomplete correct? [5]These are not arguments here, these are questions. I like to learn, so there is no need to dog pile.
http://www.frw.ca/rouge.php?ID=105Do people fossil hunt in forests?
Great stuff Vort, Thank you very much. I will search for pictures of these primate fossils tonight at home.
I wanted to ask something else.
I realize that these beings or animals being found did not live in a desert. My question was: isn't that where we do most of our fossil hunting? Do people fossil hunt in forests?
What I gave in post 3020 was a range of fossils that have been discovered in purported bigfoot haunts, illustrating that rare fossils dating back as far as 251 million years are routinely pulled out of the ground under bigfoot's feet. Why no bones of an animal that's supposed to be living right now? I camp in the PNW about twice a year. I have run across dead deer 7 or 8 times, dead black bear exactly 3 times. So it doesn't serve to say that the rain forrest gobbles its dead. If bigfoot were real, there would be some sort of fossil trace.
What I gave in post 3020 was a range of fossils that have been discovered in purported bigfoot haunts, illustrating that rare fossils dating back as far as 251 million years are routinely pulled out of the ground under bigfoot's feet. Why no bones of an animal that's supposed to be living right now? I camp in the PNW about twice a year. I have run across dead deer 7 or 8 times, dead black bear exactly 3 times. So it doesn't serve to say that the rain forrest gobbles its dead. If bigfoot were real, there would be some sort of fossil trace.
The problem is how you are addressing your target audience. The message just will not make it the way you built.
Consider the following:
1. Many footers (as well as many fringe subjects enthusiasts) are not like the average student you get in class. A student, when he/she enters classroom is (OK, supposed to be) willing to learn. Many fringe subjects enthusiasts, on the other hand, will claim to already know and that labcoat-wearing mainstream eggheads refuse to accept their pet beliefs poorly disguised as theories. When they come here to debate, they come as evangelizers and crusaders.
2. Fringe subjects enthusiasts quite often are ignorant of science and its methods; some are willing to learn, while others are actually Pol-Pot-grade anti-intellectualits. Many will be willing to learn only to the point where their beliefs start to be threatened. Bottomline- most don't bother.
3. Because of the above issues, some will have problems grasping many analogies and points.
That's why the message must be as clear as possible; I believe most people "on the other side of the fence" missed that the point was the number of species we know as an oppostion to the frequent argument on ignorance they use. By the way ever noticed the "incomplete fossil record" used by footers is the very same line used by anti-evolutionists and creationists?
Don't get me wrong, I know it sounds like I'm trashing them all, but that's not my intention. Ignorance (and sometimes hate) of science is not their fault; it is actually a fundamental flaw of our society. Our society, our culture, by failing to provide a good education is the one to blame. Think about this- many of our cable channels supposed to be educative present shows disguised as documentaries wich promote all sorts of woo. [F-word]education! We want audience and money!
I can see where you might think Bigfoot is not paranormal, but wouldn't his abilities have to be considered paranormal? Like the ability to avoid detection and not leave any hair, scat, bones, bodies, or fossils?Keating also dabbles in ghosts and UFO investigations and always has. He is also a accomplished amateur meteorologist He is just more well known in Bigfootry. The Bigfoot phenomenon has always been lumped in with the other paranormal topics much to most of our chagrin. Many paranormal conferences ask for a Bigfooter to speak at them. I have been asked to speak at a local one and declined. BTW, I am sure you are glad that comedy is not your profession.
...anyone seen a real life sasquatch?