The investigators
for the North American Wood Ape Conservancy (NAWAC) (who I always liked, even
if their name implies preexisting belief in a "wood ape," for
renaming the phenomenon so they could start fresh) didn't get a close look, but
they did what is, compared to most of the dreck in this business, a very
careful investigation over a four-year period that collected a lot of secondary
evidence, from thermal images to rock-throwing, that couldn't be easily
explained. I still would have passed it by if it were not for Sharon Hill, a
geologist and a well-respected, smart skeptic who runs the Doubtful News blog. Sharon read the
report and agreed that a lot of this was very puzzling and needed answers to
questions like (my wording) "Who trekked many miles into the wildest part
of Oklahoma just to heave rocks at bigfoot hunters?" She wrote a very good post on it.
She has never, and
does not now, endorse sasquatch as a real animal. She looked objectively at the
report and agreed the investigators seemed sincere, didn't leap to conclusions,
and had genuinely puzzling experiences.
(Here's the report.)
Well, you'd think
Sharon had come out foursquare for demon-hunting, poltergeists, and New Age
medicine. Some of the comments from
fellow skeptics focused on the report itself ("chock full of
assumptions" was one fairly reasonable line) and others dismissed Sharon's
seeming indulgence of such nonsense. One skeptic dismissed it with, "I'm
astounded that any of this could be considered evidence."
Now there are a lot of sincere people looking for sasquatch, and there are a lot of publicity-seeking idiots, and there are certainly hoaxers. And missing one of the largest species in North America seems, on the face of it, not possible. But the response went a little - well, unscientific. No one accused
Sharon directly of being an idiot, but a lot of them implied it, and, while
some did read the original report, others flatly refused to. (My favorite line posted in defense of the
investigation was, "Drunken
hillbillies would have to be little more than brain dead to be hanging out in
this very remote area, over a four year period, looking for an opportunity to
throw rocks at investigators who are brandishing rifles.") As Sharon put
it, “Several people misunderstood my approach. I have gained much information
and understanding by not being hostile or dismissive to those on the
metaphorical “other side of the fence”. I’m not out to debunk Sasquatch. I wish
to understand what people are experiencing and why they conclude this creature
is real.”
The point I'm
getting at here is that Sharon considered the evidence and published a
well-reasoned, objective review knowing full well that it would not go over
well with some of her friends. Her approach
was scientific, just as it was when she destroyed the Melba Ketchum idiocy. The
NAWAC people have not proven sasquatch exists: they have proven they
encountered a lot of puzzling incidents. That's all Sharon said. Fellow
skeptics shouldn't be taking her to the woodshed for it.
Press on, my friend.
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