Bigfoot, do you believe?

Anybody watch Monster Quest ?

Why is it that out of like 20 quests I've seen none of them find any evidence.
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Originally Posted by GaBeGRaMz

Anybody watch Monster Quest ?

Why is it that out of like 20 quests I've seen none of them find any evidence.
show was terrible only because all the stories and creatures seemed made up just for the show, almost all of them i never even heard of before.
 
Originally Posted by Mateen Cleaves

Originally Posted by GaBeGRaMz

Anybody watch Monster Quest ?

Why is it that out of like 20 quests I've seen none of them find any evidence.
show was terrible only because all the stories and creatures seemed made up just for the show, almost all of them i never even heard of before.
Well, 'urban myths' are usually false or made up. I mean some of them are believable like the huge wild hog episode and possibly big foot
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. But the show sucks, they never find anything. I rather watch destination truth on Sci-fi though they never find anything either. But, they do make itfunny with the commentary.
 
Originally Posted by PhillyPG1

Originally Posted by Mateen Cleaves

Originally Posted by PhillyPG1

It is so hard to believe...with all the technology out there...everybody has camera phones and we are always taking pictures,and we cant get a good clear pic of a ufo or bigfoot or something
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usually happens in the boonies with hicks who dont even have phones or cameras so that explains it
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yeh its always out there
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"pa get tha musket,we has an intruder!!!"
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They always catch big foot running into the woods...i wanna get a clip of him running past a Starbucks or some %#@%..i wish some of this stuff was real
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Originally Posted by AlBooBoo5

Originally Posted by Maelstroom

Originally Posted by ZEEN1NE

Originally Posted by xxhu5sl1npnoyxx

snake-borneo.jpg


borneo snake


care to elaborate?
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thats what I was talking about earlier in the thread. supposedly it is a 100+ foot snake that locals talk about
When I read that I thought of the worm from GOW 2.
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But is there a story behind it? Other than it being a 100+ foot snake?
 
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This is supposed to be another pic of the snake. !+#* is mad fake

Have any of y'all ever heard of that big @@% gator that's from Africa and eats people. I can't think of its name right now
 
Originally Posted by jville819

2w3xsg2.jpg


This is supposed to be another pic of the snake. !+#* is mad fake

Have any of y'all ever heard of that big @@% gator that's from Africa and eats people. I can't think of its name right now

That picture may be fake

but there was a story on Yahoo not to long ago that said scientists found prehistoric fossils or something like that of
a snake that was about that big. It said the snake could easily eat a whole cow and also ate crocodiles...

I'll look for the story
 
Originally Posted by mloonz88
i remember seeing this on a show, they had a guy wear some stuff and maybe stilts. They said it wasnt possible for a human to put on a costume andwhat not and run that fast on the hillside like it just did in that video.
 
Alright I'm back to drop some knowledge. This is the same one that was on
yahoo 'cept that it's on a different website.

http://www.gainesville.com/article/20090205/articles/902051015http://www.gainesville.co...090205/articles/902051015

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By Harriet Daniels
Staff writer


Published: Thursday, February 5, 2009 at 6:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, February 4, 2009 at 10:02 p.m.

Bones discovered in Colombia by a team of international scientists, including one from the University of Florida, were recently determined to be those of the world's largest known snake.

The findings give scientists an idea of how large animals were more than 60 million years ago and also provide an idea of how warm the Earth was then.

The prehistoric snake is featured in the latest edition of the science journal Nature, which hits news stands today.

It's believed the snake was as long as a bus - between 42 feet to 45 feet long - and weighed more than a ton.

"It would have to squeeze through an office door in order to come in and eat you," said Jonathan Bloch, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Florida Museum of Natural History at UF.

Bloch said it was not until they returned to UF in 2007 and began unpacking fossils wrapped in toilet paper marked "crocodile" that UF graduate students Alex Hastings and Jason Bourque realized the vertebrae belonged to a very large snake.

UF graduate students working on the excavation included Hastings and Colombian-born Edwin Cadena, who are both working on dissertations about extinct crocodiles and turtles. The snake's discovery also uncovered the largest fresh-water turtle ever found.

The group of scientists were looking for extinct mammals, crocodiles and turtles when they set out in 2004, so they were surprised to discover the snake.

As news of the discovery spread internationally, Bloch spent much of Wednesday talking to media outlets from around the globe.

"The snake is important because this is an enormous predator we did not know existed until now," Bloch said.

He added the snake fossils are also important because very little is known about what animals looked like after dinosaurs became extinct, especially in the tropics.

"This tells us what may happen in the future with global warming," he said. "It's the largest vertebrae to live on Earth for 10 million years."

So far researchers have found vertebrae from the back and ribs.

It's a study in progress, as fossils are still being collected from the site in Colombia, which is in the world's largest active coal mine in the northeastern part of the country at the base of the Guajira Peninsula.

Bloch said the site is exciting and a unique opportunity to have a look at this time and place.

Plans are for researchers to return to the area in May or June to collect more fossils. Bloch said he hopes they find the snake's skull, which will give them an idea of what the snake ate.

"We believe it may have eaten the extinct crocodiles we also found fossils for," he said.

In all, 180 fossils were found representing 28 individual snakes.

While it's a ways off, Bloch said the discovery begs for an exhibit of some kind in the future.




Could it be they're not all extinct?
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Originally Posted by cOlorWay

I can't really believe any of this until I saw some real evidence, that truly proved it.

I would like to believe it though.

They say this guy washed up on the shore of Long Island last summer. With Plum Island right across the water, something like this is something thats a little bit more evident to me.

montauk-monster.jpg
History

The story began with a July 23 article in a local newspaper, The Independent. Chief Britton, 18, of Montauk, and three friends said they found the creature on July 12 at the Ditch Plains beach, two miles east of the district. The beach is a popular surfing spot at Rheinstein Estate Park owned by the town of East Hampton. Hewitt was quoted: We were looking for a place to sit when we saw some people looking at something... We didn't know what it was... We joked that maybe it was something from Plum Island.[3] Her color photograph ran in black and white, under the headline "The Hound of Bonacville" (a take-off on the name Bonackers, which refers to the natives of East Hampton, and The Hound of the Baskervilles which is a book in the Sherlock Holmes series). The light-hearted article speculated that the creature might be a turtle or some mutant experiment from the Plum Island Animal Disease Center before noting that Larry Penny, the East Hampton Natural Resources Director, had concluded it was a raccoon with its upper jaw missing. The article concluded that "someone took it away... to be buried... we hope."[4] A local newspaper quoted an unidentified woman, who claimed that the animal was only the size of a cat, and had decomposed to a skeleton by the time of the press coverage. She would not identify its location for inspection.[5] Hewitt's father denies claims that his daughter is keeping the body's location a secret.[5] Hewitt and her friends were interviewed on Plum-TV, a local cable television show.[6] Alanna Navitski, an employee of Evolutionary Media Group in Los Angeles, California, passed a photo of the creature to Anna Holmes at Jezebel, claiming that a friend's sister saw the monster in Montauk. Holmes then passed it along to fellow Gawker Media website Gawker.com which gave it wide attention on July 29 under the headline "Dead Monster Washes Ashore in Montauk".[7] Cryptozoologist Loren Coleman at Cryptomundo first coined the name the "Montauk Monster" on July 29, 2008. [8] The moniker was disseminated globally on the Internet in the following days. Photographs were widely circulated via email and weblogs, and the national media picked up on it raising speculation about the creature. The potential urban legend stature of the Montauk Monster was noted by Snopes.[9] [edit]Possible identifications

Speculation in published reports included theories that the Montauk Monster might have been a turtle without its shell-even though a turtle's shell cannot be removed without damaging the spine[10][11]-a dog, a raccoon,[12][13] or perhaps a science experiment from the nearby government animal testing facility, the Plum Island Animal Disease Center.[14] The creature's appearance was believed to have been altered through immersion in water for an extended period before coming to rest on the shore, making it difficult to identify.[12] William Wise, director of Stony Brook University's Living Marine Resources Institute, interpreted the photo along with a colleague; they deemed the creature a fake, the result of "someone who got very creative with latex." Wise discounted the following possibilities:[15] Raccoon. (The legs appear to be too long in proportion to the body.) Sea turtle. (Sea turtles do not have teeth.) Rodent. (Rodents have two huge, curved incisor teeth in front of their mouths.) Dog or other canine such as a coyote. (Prominent eye ridge and the feet don't match.) Sheep. (Sheep don't have sharp teeth). On August 1st, Gawker[16] published pictures and X-ray images of a water rat, an Australian rodent with several similarities to the Montauk Monster, such as the "beak", tail, feet, and size. On the same day, Jeff Corwin appeared on Fox News and claimed that upon close inspection of the photograph, he feels sure the "monster" is merely a raccoon or dog that has decomposed slightly.[12] This was backed up by Darren Naish, a British paleontologist, who examined the images and agreed that, if real, the creature was a raccoon. Naish says that "claims that the limb proportions of the Montauk carcass are unlike those of raccoons are not correct", and on his blog he furnishes an illustration of an intact raccoon corpse drawn over the corpse in the photograph.[12] On August 5 2008, Fox News Channel's Morning Show repeated speculation that the beast is a decayed corpse of a capybara, even though capybaras do not have tails.[17] The next day, the same program reported that an unnamed man claimed that the animal's carcass had been stolen from his front yard.[18]
From Wikipedia.
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that was painful to read
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