LAL
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 19, 2005
- Messages
- 3,255
Yes, I've seen it. Have you seen the cryptomundo blog on the issue? It's two pages back in the older posts. Have you ever considered that Ostman's account of the talking BF family may have given Patterson inspiration for designing a female bigfoot?
Nope.
Self proclaimed BF investigators haven't been found making hoaxes?
Not the reputable ones. You're refering to Freeman, I assume. Who else?
And that is because...?
Those who want it to be a man in a suit have to hold Roger responsible for it. When it's pointed out he didn't have the money, it becomes a lousy, falling apart suit. When it's pointed out he plain wasn't smart enough he becomes a homespun genius. He was in a no-win situation.
Yes. You have there one group of images showing what is know to be a man in a suit and another of what may be a man in a suit or an unidentified North American bipedal primate. We have reliable evidence of lots of people in suits but none for the U.N.A.B.P.
That's Bob Heironimus himself in a Morris costume, built for the recreation to end all recreations.
Willam Parcher seems too fixated on other matters to notice, so I thought I'd ask you. Does BH really look like Patty?
Again, is it really necessary to cling to the PGF?
I don't cling to it at all. The would-be debunkers seem to be the ones who keep bringing it up.
Right, another 'unfortunately'. That's too bad.
Answers the question why hair isn't found in nests, anyway. In that case it was.
I ran across this while searching today and thought Correa might like to see it (I still have him on Ignore). It mentions the Daegling paper on tooth wear we talked about.
"Of course the relative quantities of phytoliths do not directly address dietary composition, since different plants have different phytolith abundances. Likewise, one might speculate that the phytoliths on fossil teeth represent foods eaten near the time of death -- a "last meal" effect. This might explain the apparent evidence for one kind of fruit in the Gigantopithecus data: the individual died at the time that fruit was in season. In any event, Ciochon and colleagues (1990) conclude it likely that Gigantopithecus had a very broad diet, that nonetheless included bamboo as a staple. In support of this, they cite an examination of tooth wear by Daegling and Grine (1989 in abstract; later published in 1994 in SAJS) that found Gigantopithecus microwear to be similar to chimpanzees. Chimpanzees themselves eat a majority of fruit, with smaller proportions of leaves, insects, and meat."
http://johnhawks.net/weblog/fossils/apes/gigantopithecus/
<emphasis mine>
