Fifty-seven years ago, the U.S. joined the Space Age with a little satellite ingeniously built into the fourth stage on Wernher von Braun's Jupiter-C booster (we purists don't use the later name "Juno.")
How to learn the full story?
From 1998 to 2004, I spent most of my spare time on telling the story of the Sputnik-Explorer-Vanguard competition to launch the first satellite. With help from coauthor Erika Maurer Vadnais (nee Lishock), and cooperation from space historians and living veterans of all three American programs, we wrote the first book to trace the Space Age from ancient times through the 1950s. The Foreword was the last thing the late James Van Allen ever wrote for publication. With NASA sponsoring publication through Texas A&M, we delivered a book we're still proud of - an original take on this pivotal era, with some corrections from previous histories and some new information from our interviews. It's also the first book ever to tell the story of the Navy's shoestring NOTSNIK, the world's first air-launched satellite. As we celebrate the 57th anniversary of Explorer 1, I hope you'll give it a look. Available from the publisher, Amazon, B&N, or the authors!
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Sunday, January 31, 2016
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Poem for the fallen astronauts (and cosmonauts)
This is the time of year when NASA remembers the crews of Apollo 1, Challenger, and Columbia. It's become an international occasion, too, with thoughts of the cosmonauts of Soyuz 1 and Soyuz 11.
You were the best our species had to offer. We honor you.
I wrote this in 2014.
You were the best our species had to offer. We honor you.
I wrote this in 2014.
A poem for space - The Explorers
The Explorers
(written on the occasion of the loss of SpaceShipTwo)
The souls departing Earthbound life
Rise to heaven’s plane
Soldier, sailor, priest, or king
The destination is the same
But in an even higher realm
With stars always in view
Meet those lost in exploration
Remembering how they flew
- Matt Bille, space historian, 2014
(written on the occasion of the loss of SpaceShipTwo)
The souls departing Earthbound life
Rise to heaven’s plane
Soldier, sailor, priest, or king
The destination is the same
But in an even higher realm
With stars always in view
Meet those lost in exploration
Remembering how they flew
Komarov toasts Gus Grissom
And Resnik talks with Clark
Ramon and Chalwa share a tale
As they look beyond the dark
Adams shares his glory days
With Husband and McNair
And always they watch
And urge us on
To rise above the air.
Don’t cling to mother Earth, they’d say
God has given us the stars
There’s a reason we aspire
To cross the celestial bar
We gave our lives
(We don’t regret)
To push back the frontier
Remember us by challenging
And rising past your fears
Patseyev, Onizuka
Anderson and Brown
Salute each new endeavour
That lifts us from the ground
To every new thrust into space
They raise their glasses high
And remind us we were always meant
To reach beyond the sky.
And Resnik talks with Clark
Ramon and Chalwa share a tale
As they look beyond the dark
Adams shares his glory days
With Husband and McNair
And always they watch
And urge us on
To rise above the air.
Don’t cling to mother Earth, they’d say
God has given us the stars
There’s a reason we aspire
To cross the celestial bar
We gave our lives
(We don’t regret)
To push back the frontier
Remember us by challenging
And rising past your fears
Patseyev, Onizuka
Anderson and Brown
Salute each new endeavour
That lifts us from the ground
To every new thrust into space
They raise their glasses high
And remind us we were always meant
To reach beyond the sky.
Monday, January 25, 2016
Rare finds in the Pacific
"Living fossil" is an overused term (heck, a self-contradictory one) but it's always cool when something turns up alive that we know only from paleontology. A reef in the Coral Sea, famed for the pivotal battle in World War II when the U.S. first checked Japan;s naval advance, was explored by an international team in 2009. It's not unusual for the data from an expedition to take a year or two to sift through. In this case it took 7, which is a little long, but it included very interesting stuff including corals never known to exist in the region and some new species of glass sponge along with rare footage of the chambered nautilus, the "living fossil" that launched a hundred newspaper headlines. The scientists used a ROV that went down 800m. One noted, "At 800 meters the water is cold and dark, and the environmental conditions really haven't changed much for millions of years."
In other marine life news, two large, deep-diving, and completely weird sharks, the goblin shark and the frilled shark, went on display at a Japanese aquarium. The former has a ridiculously oversized snout, while the latter looks almost like a thick-bodied mutant eel. It's very rare to see either in an aquarium, but in Yokahama you can now see both.
Goblin shark (U. of Florida)
In other marine life news, two large, deep-diving, and completely weird sharks, the goblin shark and the frilled shark, went on display at a Japanese aquarium. The former has a ridiculously oversized snout, while the latter looks almost like a thick-bodied mutant eel. It's very rare to see either in an aquarium, but in Yokahama you can now see both.
Goblin shark (U. of Florida)
Sunday, January 24, 2016
Thanks for a great COSine
I couldn't attend every part of the Colorado Springs science fiction convention, COSine, but if you missed it entirely, and are a local science writer or SF fan, you need to make this a regular event on your calendar. Robin Minogue and the rest of the staff pulled off a great event, Guest of Honor Jim Butcher (who is moving to Colorado!) was gracious, encouraging, and informative, all the panels I served on or attended were lively and full of insight, I met a lot of great people. Thanks to my publisher, Carol Hightshoe, of Wolfsinger Publications as well. See y'all next year!
Thursday, January 21, 2016
COSine is here!
Can we colonize Mars? Find out in the panel I moderate here in Colorado Springs at 3PM local time on Friday. It's part of the COSine Science Fiction Convention, with special guest Jim Butcher (yes, THE Jim Butcher).
Saturday, January 16, 2016
Eva Saulitis, moonshots, and cancer
We've lost one of the most eloquent of nature writers, poet, marine biologist, teacher, and author Eva Saulitis. I knew her only from internet correspondence, but her orca book, Into Great Silence, made a deep impression on me. It is one of the great books in terms of personalizing nature and making us understand another species.
She died of cancer, a malady that has claimed far too many. We all know about David Bowie and Alan Rickman. My friend and agent, Cicily Janus, has been batting it for over a year. (Please give here: I have.)
President Obama's launch of a "moonshot" initiative against cancer is a worthy cause, one I am willing to be taxed to support. I have no special knowledge of medicine, but I do have some of space history, and I have to caution that his comparison to putting a man on the moon is a misleading one. President Kennedy's challenge to land an American on our natural satellite was a huge technical endeavor, but there was never any doubt about how to do it (namely, rockets), even though countless details needed to be worked out. Cancer is a complex phenomenon with some 400 variations. It won't be cured with any single approach. It will take time, money, and cooperation, and progress will be incremental. But it's worth doing.
Saulitis’ book tells much about what we’re learning and what we don’t know
concerning orcas. She followed a transient
pod, originally of 22 animals which traveled in smaller, intermingling groups,
and pairs, in and around Prince William
Sound from 1987 (thus watching the devastating effects of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill) until, a quarter
century later, there were seven, most having died or vanished, the calves no
longer coming. We don’t know how many species of orca there are, or whether they
are part of a highly variable species (similar to, say, humanity). She wrote that a stocky type with a tall
fin, known as Biggs’ killer whale, appears in transient populations from four separate
regions, which never cross paths.
The author watched an incredible scene where four orcas chased
and harried a fleeing Dall’s porpoise. Suddenly, as if a whistle had blown, all
five animals simple stopped where they were.
Two minutes later, the chase started again, the orcas taking turns
breaching beneath the porpoise and throwing it in the air, until the prey was
finally grabbed and eaten. On another occasion, though, a Dall’s porpoise
attached itself to an orca pod and was tolerated. It hung out with them for
months. Was the porpoise in the chase
“game” perhaps unaware the orcas were serious?
She describes her interest in conservation as dating from seeing the 1972 cartoon The Last of the Curlews. (I’ve seen it, and it was very touching.) She wrote about the neurobiology term “origin moments,” those times when we experience something remarkable for the first time. The mind tends to remember even the smallest details. For me, for example, one was the pillar of fire that split the night sky when Apollo 17 left for Moon while we watched from a beach miles away. For her, it was her first encounter with orcas.
She describes her interest in conservation as dating from seeing the 1972 cartoon The Last of the Curlews. (I’ve seen it, and it was very touching.) She wrote about the neurobiology term “origin moments,” those times when we experience something remarkable for the first time. The mind tends to remember even the smallest details. For me, for example, one was the pillar of fire that split the night sky when Apollo 17 left for Moon while we watched from a beach miles away. For her, it was her first encounter with orcas.
President Obama's launch of a "moonshot" initiative against cancer is a worthy cause, one I am willing to be taxed to support. I have no special knowledge of medicine, but I do have some of space history, and I have to caution that his comparison to putting a man on the moon is a misleading one. President Kennedy's challenge to land an American on our natural satellite was a huge technical endeavor, but there was never any doubt about how to do it (namely, rockets), even though countless details needed to be worked out. Cancer is a complex phenomenon with some 400 variations. It won't be cured with any single approach. It will take time, money, and cooperation, and progress will be incremental. But it's worth doing.
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Cryptozoology coverage follow-ups
Actually, the fallout on my coverage of the International Cryptozoology Museum conference was pretty good. Sharon Hill of Doubtful News, a skeptic of most cryptozoological claims, covered it on her site here. There are good discussions on FaceBook coming out of it. I sent it to the "Talk" thread on the National Association of Science Writers site (I belong to the NASW), but didn't raise a response. Science writers in general have their own survival to think about these days as well as science, so I'm not too surprised.
Dr. Paul LeBlond, president of the new International Cryptozoology Society, was kind enough to look at my treatment for a 10-part series on marine life and legends, called Argosy (think Cosmos meets Jacques Cousteau) and suggest some folks to submit it to.
I also gathered some data for my next book, Seas, Sharks, and Serpents, which I swear WILL come out next year.
Onwards!
Dr. Paul LeBlond, president of the new International Cryptozoology Society, was kind enough to look at my treatment for a 10-part series on marine life and legends, called Argosy (think Cosmos meets Jacques Cousteau) and suggest some folks to submit it to.
I also gathered some data for my next book, Seas, Sharks, and Serpents, which I swear WILL come out next year.
Onwards!
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Conservation success: the manatee
Manatees are, as a friend of mine from Florida remarked, like floating sofas: they are about the most inoffensive critters imaginable, sort of like aquatic Schmoos. I saw a rescued one in the Miami Seaquarium around 1975 and remember it as simply hanging there in the water, not particularly interested in anything.
Nevertheless, they were endangered by human activity, mainly habitat loss and injury by ships and boats that used to run over them. The U.S. species, technically known as the West Indian manatee, dropped to under 1,300 in 1972 and were listed as "Endangered." It took a long time, a great deal of professional and volunteer human help, and laws about everything from pollution to "go slow" boating zones, but the big lugs have improved significantly. There are well over 6,000 animals today, and the government has recommended that they can be downgraded to "Threatened." If the action is completed, it will still be illegal to kill them, but some regulations may be removed. There are some environmental organizations who think the downgrade is premature, and there's a comment period and many other activities and processes ahead before action is taken.
The sirenians in general have had a hard time with humans. Dugongs are threatened or endangered throughout their tropical ranges, and the most spectacular, Steller's sea cow, lasted only a few decades between discovery and extinction. All the more reason to praise a success story.
Nevertheless, they were endangered by human activity, mainly habitat loss and injury by ships and boats that used to run over them. The U.S. species, technically known as the West Indian manatee, dropped to under 1,300 in 1972 and were listed as "Endangered." It took a long time, a great deal of professional and volunteer human help, and laws about everything from pollution to "go slow" boating zones, but the big lugs have improved significantly. There are well over 6,000 animals today, and the government has recommended that they can be downgraded to "Threatened." If the action is completed, it will still be illegal to kill them, but some regulations may be removed. There are some environmental organizations who think the downgrade is premature, and there's a comment period and many other activities and processes ahead before action is taken.
Photo USFWS
The sirenians in general have had a hard time with humans. Dugongs are threatened or endangered throughout their tropical ranges, and the most spectacular, Steller's sea cow, lasted only a few decades between discovery and extinction. All the more reason to praise a success story.
Sunday, January 10, 2016
Full report on the International Cryptozoology Museum conference
International Cryptozoology Museum Conference, Night 1
January 4, 2016
I like cryptozoologists. Even though I don’t use the term for myself
anymore (too much TV baggage), I like the people I meet in the business. I like their stubborn optimism, their
enthusiasm, and their determination. Except for the hoaxers, they’re a great
bunch to hang out with. I critique the
field a lot for its collective habit of endorsing particular “crypids” before
the evidence justifies it, but science needs amatuers (which most cryptozoology researchers are), even in 2016, and it needs optimists, even wild-eyed ones.
So here I am at the inaugural ICM Conference in St.
Augustine, FL. Loren Coleman, founder of
the ICM in Portland, Maine, ably seconded by his effervescent wife Jenny, has
gathered some of the most active people in the field. He hoped for 100+ attendees to create one of
the leading conferences on the subject, but it’s the first year, and maybe half
that have gathered. What they lack in numbers, though, they make up for in
energy, and the white-bearded Coleman is as enthusiastic as they come.
I wish I could describe all of Night 1, but I spent
the opening social on the road after a two-hour delay in Atlanta to fix a fuel
pump in the airplane and re-top the tanks. This was annoying but ok with us
passengers: a retired Navy pilot sitting next to me commented that the only
time a plane can have too much fuel is when it’s on fire.
So what I missed was the awarding of the Golden Yeti,
a rather intimidating-looking statuette that went to the Cryptozoologist of the
Year. The awardee was Jeremy Efroymson, a film-maker, attorney, writer, and
philanthropist who I honestly hadn’t heard of, but he’s been important: as
Loren wrote, “Jeremy is bestowed this honor for his quiet but steady support of
serious cryptozoological pursuits. Jeremy and the Efroymson Family Foundation
have awarded grants and funds since at least, 2012, to such grantees as the
Virtual Footprints Archive at Idaho State University, the Ohio Bigfoot
Conference, and the International Cryptozoology Museum.” Cryptozoology doesn’t exactly top the list
for National Science Foundation grants, so the field is fortunate to have
Jeremy.
The Golden Yeti
I did make it to the presentation on the Florida Skunk Ape,
a subject of interest since I grew up down the coast from here in Vero
Beach. I heard only rumors of sightings
as a kid, but I knew what it was, or was supposed to be.
(Quick aside: I was volunteering on a political
campaign in 1976 when a newspaper from the town of St. Cloud headlined a
"900-lb Hairy Creature Stalking Reedy Creek Area." I pinned it to the
wall with the note that we now knew where our opponent was campaigning. It was
funny at the time.)
Tonight’s presenter was Rob Robinson. I’ve used the word “enthusiastic” a lot, but
I had to use it again here. He was an
infectious speaker, weaving a great story with bits of humor like the time he
was scared out of his wits by a large nocturnal animal that turned out to be a
cow. He debunked some recent photo and video hoaxes but showed some images no
one present had seen before. (Still too distant, too dark, etc., although a
video of a dark figure gliding easily through a swampy spot where you'd think a human would
normally walk with great difficulty was interesting despite the poor quality of
the image.) When I asked him the
standard question – why isn’t there better evidence, when we have roadkills and
photos of the extremely rare Florida panther – he replied he thinks the
evidence is mounting, even if mostly fuzzy “blobsqatch" imagery and
footprints so far – as people become more aware. He thinks a small population
of smart primates very wary of humans could hide in Florida wilderness a long
time. Despite my skepticism on all things squatch-related, I can’t really say
that’s impossible, although there's still the huge problem of how a large
primate got to North America, when, and from where. His belief Florida supports two anomalous
primates, Bigfoot and the smaller (and smellier) Skunk Ape, is even harder to
accept, but his belief there is SOMETHING going on is intriguing.
On the subject of another cryptid, or near-cryptid,
Rob commented on my mention of the Florida panther by reporting he and his wife
watched a black Florida panther walk right in front of their car in daylight.
There aren’t supposed to be black (melanistic) panthers in Florida, but there
aren’t supposed to be any in Maine, either, and my dad is pretty certain about
the one he saw 60 years ago. Biologist Jeff Corwin described his own Florida
panther sighting thus: “It was darker than the panthers I'd seen in photos,
more charcoal than sage.” So I’ve never ruled out black, or at least dark,
panthers, although Florida wildlife authorities blew Rob off when he said
“black.”
There was an interesting documentary showing after
that meeting, but I had work to do for my day job and had to beg off. But I
enjoyed Night 1, as brief as it was, and look forward to Day 2, including my
own talk on bears.
It’s all off to a howling good start.
International Cryptozoology Museum Conference
Day 2
January 5, 2016
Today was the full day of presentations here at the
ICM conference. Not to throw in a plug, but the Casa Monica is a great old
hotel, updated with all the amenities, and Loren Coleman of the ICM did a great
job in picking the hotel and getting everyone an affordable rate at the height
of tourist season.
I’d forgotten how touristy Florida was: the tackiness
is so assertive that a kind of grandeur creeps into it. It’s different from the tackiness you see in
most tourist spots, though: in Florida, it’s an affectionate kind of tacky,
where everyone, locals and visitors, is in on the joke and no one takes it too
seriously. This is the first European
city in the Americas, and there’s a lot of real history showing its face amid
the T-shirt shops.
Anyway, today was all about presentations. I am a
skeptic of most cryptozoolgical claims: it would take more than we have now to
make me believe in huge unknown American primates or Mongolian death
worms. But the level of science in the
presentations was frankly higher than I’d expected, and I came away
understanding much better WHY the convinced people are convinced. People who are sure cryptozoology has nothing
to offer science should spend more time with these folks. At the very least, their work tells us more
about folklore, beliefs, and the way we view nature. At the most, it may yet
point the way to some major discoveries. (By the way, these are in the order I
wrote them up, not exactly the order they were presented in.)
My presentation on bears was very well received. I
pointed out mysteries that still exist with bears (the reported giant black
variety of the Kamchatka brown bear) while arguing that other questions, such
as the identity of the odd grizzly known as MacFarlane’s bear, can be put to
rest. Bears offer many lessons for cryptozoologists, from the ways they are
tracked and studied to the attitudes of officialdom toward inconvenient
reports. (I reported on a good witness who told me first-hand about seeing a Colorado grizzly bear, which is supposed to be extinct, and the state wildlife people dismissed it order to - seriously, someone told him this - avoid the huge hassle of closing off the area while they investigated.) I gave the presentation to
Loren and will share it with anyone who asks.
French cryptozoologist Michael Raynal couldn’t attend in person or by Skype link, so Loren Coleman did his presentation on the giant octopus of St. Augustine. It was a fascinating presentation, with a lot of old news clippings and photos, with Dr. Paul LeBlond (see below), a Canadian oceanographer, helping out by translating some verbiage from the French. The carcass that came ashore in 1896, was, very probably, a sperm whale’s blubber/skin/connective tissue, but as long as we’re not absolutely certain, some mystery – and some fun – remains. (Or I hope it does: personally I write this off now as a whale. As usual, I hope I'm wrong.) Terry Cullen, a herpetological genetics expert in attendance, suggested the newest tests should be done on the bits of tissue that still remain as samples. Loren made the interesting point that the tourist mecca of St. Augustine has somehow missed making any financial hay out of this event: indeed, local shops hold nothing about it at all. (I checked across the street at the Lightner museum of local history: the gift shop staff, at least, had never heard of it.)
Dr. LeBlond, a physicist and oceanographer whose
curiosity drew him into the “Caddy” business some years ago, opened by
describing two recurrent “sea monster” motifs of First Nations people in the
British Columbia and adjoining areas. What’s come to be called “Caddy” is also
well known locally, and LeBlond has amassed a large collection of sightings
which he believes make the two most important criteria: 1) Clearly an animal,
and 2) not a KNOWN animal. Plotting these by length from 10 feet (noting that
10-footers could be seals), to 100-footers (mistaken whales?) yields a cluster
at 40-59 feet. He notes that sighting
areas do not stay static over time: that is, you can have a run of sightings in
one area, then a gap of several years before that area produces another
sighting. On the complex issue of the Nash video of numerous animals which
appear to be harassing a pod of belugas, he notes the animals turned back when
they neared a fishing boat’s nets, and, while features like flippers were never
seen, the front ends seemed to have a profile something like a Boeing 747 with
its bulbous nose section. At one point, in a video segment which is either lost
or taped over, LeBlond and cryptozoologist John Kirk (viewing it separately) saw
a head, a bit like a seal’s but more oval in horizontal cross-section when
seen from the front and with a narrower neck, pop up and look toward the
camera. I discussed with him afterward the question of how sure he was that a
drawing of this, circulated widely in the cryptozoological community and in his
latest book, was accurate. He was cautious about it: it matched what he
remembered, but with he and Kirk contributing what they thought the tape showed
at a considerable distance to an artist, the final drawing is “about five steps
removed” from what the actual animal looks like, and there is some margin for
error.
Archaeologist/anthropologist Kathy Strain gave a very
thought-provoking presentation about the prevalence of Sasquatch-type creatures
in Native American lore. I knew there
were a lot of legends, stories, and, supposedly, history about such creatures,
but I had no idea how ubiquitous it was. “Hairy Man” type creatures exist in
art, basketry, songs, dances, totem poles, and oral histories, much of it
pre-Columbian. While there are many
variations, a common and amusing one was that females carried baskets and swept
up bad children to take them away to eat, while males, often half-human (the
females were claimed to prefer human men to their own kind), sort of blundered
around eating mostly nuts and shellfish.
Strain showed old films of dances, showed pictographs of Hairy Man
people weeping (because humans were afraid of them), and played back a haunting
song from one tribe that only women were allowed to sing (it asked the Hairy
Man to come take away the spirits of the dead at a funeral.) Since many Western stories are about real
animals endowed with fanciful characteristics, she argues, these kinds of
beliefs don’t mean the animals are not real. When I asked how a non-expert
could differentiate between spiritual and physical creatures in Native American
tales, she explained that a creature could be either or both, just as
Christians and others believe we are both body and spirit/soul. The art object
she showed that stuck with me was a centuries-old Haida mask decorated with
horsehair that looks so much like an ape that she is stumped to suggest what
else it could be, and I had the same reaction. While many cultures can tell
visitors what they want to hear, either to please them or to pull their legs,
Strain believes the unbroken continuity of countless tribes’ beliefs across
ages indicate that recent additions don’t detract from the essential point that
those who lived here before Columbus widely believed such creatures were real,
and many believe they are here still. (Native Americans believe that, however
their own ancestors arrived in North America, the hairy ones were already here
just as all the other animals were.) None of this adds up to hard evidence of
existence, but collectively it's a bit challenging to just dismiss as myth.
Bigfoot-hunter Cliff Barackman gave a very good
tutorial on footprints, focusing mostly on mystery primates but with other
examples. He stressed that a footprint is not an image of the foot: it is an
image of the damage the foot did to the ground, which may be quite
different. Indeed, two footprints made
in succession by the same animal can look different, and footprints' origin can
be disguised by various forces: for example, overlapping bear tracks can look
surprisingly human. A common trait in
fake sasquatch feet is the lack of flexibility: Barackman argues the real
primate he believes exists has very flexible feet (some experts say there is a
mid-tarsal break, essentially an extra joint, but Cliff doesn’t go that far).
He dismisses three- and four-toed impressions as hoaxes. He argues several sets of “real” tracks have
very clear dermal ridges, although he did not really address how wide the
variation is in what are deemed by various researchers to be authentic
five-toed sasquatch tracks. On the
rarity of apparent juvenile impressions, he and others at the conference have
noted that genuine juvenile footprints might be taken for bare human feet. Whatever one thinks of sasquatch, he imparted
a great deal of useful information, especially for us suburban folk trying to
understand technical discussions over footprints.
He has collected some 50 impressions of Sumatra’s mystery ape, the orang-pendek and, while he believes this is a real animal, doesn’t believe it’s related to the diminutive fossil humans known as the Flores Island “hobbits” – the widely separated big toe is distinctly ape-like.
He has collected some 50 impressions of Sumatra’s mystery ape, the orang-pendek and, while he believes this is a real animal, doesn’t believe it’s related to the diminutive fossil humans known as the Flores Island “hobbits” – the widely separated big toe is distinctly ape-like.
I asked him about one of the most puzzling footprints
of all time, the “yeti” track photographed in the snows of Everest by Shipton
and Ward, and he felt this was not related to sasquatch-type creatures or the
orang-pendek: if it was a genuine print, it belonged to some other species.
Biologist and TV host Pat Spain of the series Beast Hunters stood up, and I'm glad he
was late in the day because following his act would have been impossible.
Funny, personable, and persuasive, he explained how a biologist who started by
studying shellfish (he once submitted a paper on stresses in oysters subtitled "Sprat Pain by Pat Spain") ended up
chasing cryptids all over the world. Along the way, he discovered that watching
a Westerner use the latrine is entertainment in a remote Cameroon village and
that young female orangutans are capable of molesting a human male in the most
intimate, uncomfortable, and embarrassing ways possible.
He felt at least two animals, “living dinosaur” mokele-mbembe
and the poisonous Mongolian death worm, were cultural constructs, and explained
what purpose each legend served in its respective culture. He also noted that
with mokele-mbembe, the common tactic of showing locals pictures of different
animals has been gamed by local entrepreneurs: people looked to the guides for
nods on whether they should say a certain animal lived in their area.
Spain didn't see an orang-pendek but is convinced they
exist. The local people he worked with in Sumatra not only seemed truthful but
a bit awed by the animal's humanlike locomotion: while it may be a type of
gibbon, it walks bipedally by nature, without the usual gibbon arm-balancing.
He emphasized the people he talked to knew every detail of the lives of
gibbons, orangutans, and other local primates.
Most memorably, he reported a conversation with Dr. Mike Morwood, the
discoverer of the 18,000-year-old Flores "hobbits," who told Spain he
had hard evidence, which he planned to publish, showing that species was alive
into the 1920s! The evidence was apparently lost or misplaced with the scientist's
premature death of cancer in 2013, although it may lie somewhere in his
archives awaiting rediscovery. Someone really needs to push this hard and find
out what he had.
Likewise, the certainty of a tribe Spain befriended in
the Amazon (by going through an incredibly painful ritual involving wearing gloves
filled with huge stinging ants) about the mapinguari made him feel some kind of
surviving ground sloth was a distinct possibility. He also thinks some form of large sea
creature exists within the data for the British Columbian sea serpent known as
Cadborosaurus, or “Caddy.” He doesn't
know what it is, but the number of sincere witnesses he talked to, given the
fact that "every marine scientist believes there are some large animals
left undiscovered," makes him fairly certain something is afoot.
Spain argued hard that cryptozoology and
"mainstream" biology are mutually supporting: his work on Caddy
included looking at the oarfish as a candidate and funded the first-ever CAT
scan of an oarfish, producing a trove of data on that very strange creature.
I asked Spain about the use of cryptozoology in
science education, something I've proposed a panel on for the June 2016 Denver
ComiCon. He thinks it's very valuable and described how he's gotten young
people to learn about the woods by suggesting they look for Bigfoot and along
the way studying animal tracking, ecology, and the food chain. Loren Coleman
asked him if mokele-mbembe might be, not a reptile, but a semi-aquatic rhino:
Spain is certain, though, that the area he examined houses nothing exceptional.
(The geology of the area, he noted, also ruled out any underground or
underwater caves. He did add that he did not go to one other site with monster
reports, Lake Tele: it's unreachable due to ongoing conflicts.) I wanted to
talk with him about my idea for a marine life documentary series, but he had to
run: all I could do was give him a card.
We ended up at a theater watching Revenge of the Creature, the slightly inferior but still impressive
sequel to The Creature from the Black
Lagoon. The Lagoon films remain surprisingly effective and affecting: the
creature's loneliness and his torment at being shocked by scientists studying
his learning capability come through well, and the suits remain superb even on
close examination. Seriously, we had it on a big screen and I looked hard at
the suits: I spotted a small rip on the leg in one scene, but that was it. What
craftsmen those old makeup guys were.
And so ended a
very, very interesting day.
ICM Speakers: Kathy Strain, Rob Robinson, me, Pat
Spain, Paul LeBlond, Loren Coleman, Jerome Hamlin, uncertain(?), Lyle Blackburn.
Organizer Loren Coleman
Lyle Blackburn, Pat Spain
Dr. LeBlond
ICM Conference, final day
Day 3
January 6
Today included two presentations followed by a tour of
Marineland and the approximate area where the 1896 “giant octopus” beached. I wasn’t able to make the afternoon
activities, but the morning had plenty to offer.
First off was an important bit of business. Loren
Coleman announced the kickoff of the International Cryptozoology Society, with
an online peer-reviewed journal and regular conferences. I asked him to describe how the ICS would be
different from existing organizations – what new value would it bring? He
answered that, while the ICS mission statement is still being written, its
intent was to carry on the work of the International Society for Cryptozoology,
which tried hard to put scientific principles to work in cryptozoology back in
the 1980s. The ICS will be headed by Dr.
LeBlond as the first President, while an advisory panel including several PhD’s
is being set up but is not yet announced (Coleman added that the scientific
world won’t listen to you unless you have several PhD’s around, and he has a
point.) Loren and the ICM Deputy Director, Jeff Meuse, will do the day-to-day
work of running the ICS. The first conference is planned for Portland, Maine,
site of the new/expanded museum, in 2017.
Loren described the ICS as being strictly scientific
and said that “true believers and debunkers” were not welcome. I understand what
he’s aiming for, but this statement brings up some challenges that will have to
be worked out. Does “true believers”
count all the people who think sasquatch is an apparition or assign it psychic
abilities? (There’s no way to avoid framing questions in terms of sasquatch,
despite the large number of potential cryptids all over the world: Bigfoot is
the predominant topic in most of cryptozoology these days, and the one that
attracts significant money from the TV world.) Even more difficult, what
qualifies as a “debunker”? I assume it
encompasses those who think the whole field is a pseudoscience, but those
people usually make some points worth considering if cryptozoology is to shed
the “pseudoscience” label. Does it include
people who think the field has some value but are heavily critical of its
methods and findings? How does one differentiate between reasonable and
unreasonable degrees of skepticism? It is logically possible to be irrational about a negative view as a positive one, but the terminology is getting boggy/ The word "believer" doesn't have much of a role in science anyway, does it?
If it were me trying to sort this out,, I’d invite everyone in, excluding only those people who might be there exclusively to mock others. On the other end,of the specturm I would allow anyone who was not disruptive to join but make it clear that there will be no
publications or leading roles for anyone who thinks the solutions are to be
found in the paranormal. As a Christian, I believe by definition that the
material universe is not all that exists, but cryptozoology is trying to
establish itself as a science and needs to leave all matters outside the
material to the parapsychologists. I
think Loren is sincere in his desire to create a reputable organization, and
I'll provide my input in as a member and see what Loren and LeBlond and other
leaders work out as guidelines.
OK, presentations:
Jerome Hamlin, one of the world’s leading coelacanth
experts and founder of the Dinofish.com site, reported on his adventures in
search of new populations. He began by chronicling the known history, returning
to this topic later to describe the numerous failed attempts to make some kind
of tank that would keep the deep-dwelling fish alive after a catch. While the lungfishes and not the coelacanths are
the fish in our direct line of ancestry, the coelacanth remains a much sought
after scientific prize. Particularly sought are juvenile examples: Hamlin
mentioned only one he knew of, and ichthyologists don’t know where the fish
grow up.
The original discovery off East London, South Africa,
has been followed by new populations as far north as Kenya and Tanzania and as
far east as Indonesia. Following an
email alleging the fish was known in the Solomon Islands, Hamlin made four
trips to islands in the Solomons, other nearby chains, and Papua New Guinea to
the south and west. One aspect of this
with lessons for all of cryptozoology is how carefully he tried to avoid cuing
people to tell him what they thought he wanted to hear. He classed the
responses he got into three groups:
1. Trying to please him
2. Truthful but inaccurate
3. Both accurate and true.
The results were less than he’d hoped for. One some
islands, no one had ever seen a similar fish: one islander got his hopes up but
brought him specimens of a kind of jack, although the fit wasn’t very close.
The stories Hamlin heard of caught coelacanths seemed straightforward, but
didn’t lead to any new populations. Fishermen who had seen one, or heard of
one, all emphasized this was a very rare fish, and no one had caught one in the
last couple of years: many catches were distant memories. If truthful, these men were probably
referring to stray individuals, as no one knew of a good place to catch them
regularly. One man did tell him the fish was blue in life but turned brown in
death, a fact Hamlin had avoided mentioning, so he was encouraged to think
there were at least occasional catches. After his expeditions, a Japanese team
did discover a new population off Biak, an island just north of Papua.
I asked whether
his visits to fishing villages and surveys of fish markets had led to any new
species of fish, but he said no: the fish being brought in and/or sold looked
pretty run of the mill.
Lyle Blackburn made the day’s Bigfoot presentation.
Lyle, a Texan, has spent many months in neighboring Arkansas researching the
Fouke monster, famous due to the 1972 film The
Legend of Boggy Creek (most of the events in the original film were
reported as true, although the funny scene of a guy minding his business on the
toilet and having a giant furry hand reach in through the window was invented.)
Lyle emphasized the area was still almost as undeveloped as it had been in
1972, and that sighting records stretched from 1908 to 2015.
I pointed out that a common critique of
cryptozoologists (hammered at repeatedly in Loxton and Prothero's influential book Abominable
Science) is that they already have their solution in mind and consciously or
unconsciously cue witnesses to tell them things that fit the preconceived
narrative. I asked how he tried to avoid
this. Lyle’s response was that he went after the story thinking of himself as
an investigative journalist who wants to solve the mystery, saying “I’m not out
to prove Bigfoot,” although he certainly believes the creature exists. He lets
the witnesses tell their story without interrupting before he starts
questioning. He always asks whether the subject could have been a person in
costume (and is usually told the witness thinks not.)
Closing thoughts
First and foremost, the Conference was valuable: I
learned a lot. I didn’t change my mind on any major cryptid, but as I said
yesterday, I have a much better understanding of the people who endorse those
North American primates and other creatures and why they endorse them. I will join the new ICS and wish it the best
of luck.
The Conference could have added someone from the
Florida wildlife departments to talk about local creatures and activities of
interest, such as the Florida panther, the known and suspected colonies of
escaped monkeys (and reportedly apes), and the persistent reports that other
out of place mammals, like the jaguarondi, may have become established. This
should be standard practice wherever future conferences are held: take
advantage of the local wildlife and the expertise available to discuss it, such
as getting someone from Maine in to talk about what they think happened to the
state's panthers and why they think recent reports are erroneous. While I know Loren tried to get quite a few
people who could not make it, the meeting also could have used a speaker or two
more skeptical of the major cryptids.
I would have like an anthropologist to review the
ideas about possible ancestors and routes of travel for sasquatch ancestors’
arrival in North America, a topic none of the sasquatch-related speakers
addressed. This was the conference’s most significant omission, scientifically.
I should have pressed more on it, but the presenters were talking about what
they think IS, rather than how it came to be.
Late thought: Maybe the solution to finding cryptids is to not look for cryptids: to undertake field investigations with the idea that only known species exist. Then you look for evidence of any animal being present, then consider only the known species, and then only if you are completely stumped do you consider what kinds of animals might have caused the evidence. I know I'm the research guy, not the field investigator, but maybe some version of this approach would help bridge the cryptozoology-zoology gap.
Late thought: Maybe the solution to finding cryptids is to not look for cryptids: to undertake field investigations with the idea that only known species exist. Then you look for evidence of any animal being present, then consider only the known species, and then only if you are completely stumped do you consider what kinds of animals might have caused the evidence. I know I'm the research guy, not the field investigator, but maybe some version of this approach would help bridge the cryptozoology-zoology gap.
Overall, though, I’d like to say again that this
meeting was valuable, and that people who think cryptozoology is a complete
waste of time should come to the next one and listen and discuss and debate:
we’d all be better off for that. From my experience with this crowd, such a
person would generate a lot of discussion but wouldn't have to fear being
ostracized or dunked in a river: certainly I didn't get anything but polite
argument when I expressed concerns about the science. I was impressed by the depth and breadth of
knowledge on display, even if I disagree about some of the conclusions. I had a great time. See ya’ll in Portland, I hope!
ADDED: After some lively discussions on FaceBook and email, I think "debunker" isn't an accurate word in this context. A "debunker' should be one who exposes a hoax or fraud: It's the right term, for example, if you're exposing one of the many Bigfoot hoaxes, but it's not accurate for someone who questions the validity of a proposed or actual field of inquiry. So I think that, in my own writing, I'm going to retire that word.
ADDED: After some lively discussions on FaceBook and email, I think "debunker" isn't an accurate word in this context. A "debunker' should be one who exposes a hoax or fraud: It's the right term, for example, if you're exposing one of the many Bigfoot hoaxes, but it's not accurate for someone who questions the validity of a proposed or actual field of inquiry. So I think that, in my own writing, I'm going to retire that word.
Thursday, January 07, 2016
ICM Conference, final day
Day 3
January 6
Today included two presentations followed by a tour of
Marineland and the approximate area where the 1896 “giant octopus” beached.
I wasn’t able to make the afternoon activities, but the morning had
plenty to offer.
First off was an important bit of business. Loren Coleman
announced the kickoff of the International Cryptozoology Society, with an
online peer-reviewed journal and regular conferences. I asked him to describe how the ICS would be
different from existing organizations – what new value would it bring? He answered
that, while the ICS mission statement is still being written, its intent was to
carry on the work of the International Society for Cryptozoology, which tried
hard to put scientific principles to work in cryptozoology. The will be headed by Dr. LeBlond as the
first President, while an advisory panel including several PhD’s is being set up but is not
yet announced (Coleman added that the scientific world won’t listen to you
unless you have several PhD’s around, and he has a point.) Loren and the ICM Deputy Director, Jeff Meuse, will do the day-to-day work of running the ICS. The first
conference is planned for Portland, Maine, site of the new/expanded museum, in
2017.
Loren described the ICS as being strictly scientific and said that “true believers and debunkers” were not welcome. I understand what he’s aiming for, but this statement
is fraught with problems that will have to be worked out. Does “true believers” count all the people who think
sasquatch is an apparition or assign it psychic abilities? (There’s no way to
avoid framing questions in terms of sasquatch, despite the large number of potential
cryptids all over the world: Bigfoot is the predominant topic in most of
cryptozoology these days, and the one that attracts significant money from the
TV world.) Even more difficult, what qualifies as a “debunker”? I
assume it encompasses people who think the whole field is a pseudoscience, but
those people usually make some points worth considering if cryptozoology is to
shed the “crazy” label. Does it include
people who think the field has some value but are heavily critical of its
methods and findings? How does one differentiate between reasonable and unreasonable "debunking?"
If it were me trying to define these terms, I’d let all but the most closed-minded
"debunkers"in (assuming they’d want to join) but make it clear on the
other end of the spectrum that there will be no publications or leading roles
for anyone who thinks the solutions are to be found in the paranormal. As a
Christian, I believe by definition that the material universe is not all that
exists, but cryptozoology is trying to establish itself as a science and needs
to leave all matters outside the material to the parapsychologists. I think Loren is sincere in his desire to create a reputable organization, and I'll provide my input in as a member and see what Loren and LeBlond and other leaders work out as guidelines.
OK, presentations:
Jerome Hamlin, one of the world’s leading coelacanth experts
and founder of the Dinofish.com site, reported on his adventures in search of
new populations. He began by chronicling the known history, returning to this
topic later to describe the numerous failed attempts to make some kind of tank
that would keep the deep-dwelling fish alive after a catch. While the lungfishes and not the coelacanths
are the fish in our direct line of ancestry, the coelacanth remains a much
sought after scientific prize. Particularly sought are juvenile examples:
Hamlin mentioned only one he knew of, and ichthyologists don’t know where the
fish grow up.
The original discovery off East London, South Africa, has
been followed by new populations as far north as Kenya and
Tanzania and as far east as Indonesia. Following
an email alleging the fish was known in the Solomon Islands, Hamlin made four
trips to islands in the Solomons, other nearby chains, and Papua New
Guinea to the south and west. One aspect of this with lessons
for all of cryptozoology is how carefully he tried to avoid cuing people to
tell him what they thought he wanted to hear. He classed the responses he got
into three groups:
1.
Trying to please him
2.
Truthful but inaccurate
3.
Both accurate and true.
The results were less than he’d hoped for. One some islands,
no one had ever seen a similar fish: one islander got his hopes up but brought him specimens of a
kind of jack, although the fit wasn’t very close. The stories Hamlin heard of
caught coelacanths seemed straightforward, but didn’t lead to any new populations. Fishermen who had seen one, or heard of one, all emphasized this
was a very rare fish, and no one had caught one in the last couple of years: many catches were distant memories. If truthful, these men were probably
referring to stray individuals, as no one knew of a good place to catch them
regularly. One man did tell him the fish was blue in life but turned brown in
death, a fact Hamlin had avoided mentioning, so he was encouraged to think
there were at least occasional catches. After his expeditions, a Japanese team
did discover a new population off Biak, an island just north of Papua.
I asked whether his
visits to fishing villages and surveys of fish markets had led to any new
species of fish, but he said no: the fish being brought in and/or sold looked
pretty run of the mill.
Lyle Blackburn made the day’s Bigfoot presentation. Lyle, a
Texan, has spent many months in neighboring Arkansas researching the Fouke
monster, famous due to the 1972 film The Legend of Boggy Creek (most of the
events in the original film were reported as true, although the funny scene of a
guy minding his business on the toilet and having a giant furry hand reach in
through the window was invented.) Lyle emphasized the area was still almost as
undeveloped as it had been in 1972, and that sighting records stretched from 1908 to 2015.
I pointed out that a common critique of cryptozoologists
(hammered at repeatedly in the influential book Abominable Science) is that
they already have their solution in mind and consciously or unconsciously cue
witnesses to tell them things that fit the preconceived narrative. I asked how he tried to avoid this. Lyle’s
response was that he went after the story thinking of himself as an
investigative journalist who wants to solve the mystery, saying “I’m not out to
prove Bigfoot,” although he certainly believes the creature exists. He lets the
witnesses tell their story without interrupting before he starts questioning.
He always asks whether the subject could have been a person in costume (and is
usually told the witness thinks not.)
Closing thoughts
First and foremost, the Conference was valuable: I learned a lot. I didn’t change my mind on any major cryptid, but as I said yesterday, I have a much better understanding of the people who endorse those North American primates and other creatures and why they endorse them. I will join the new ICS and wish it the best of luck.
First and foremost, the Conference was valuable: I learned a lot. I didn’t change my mind on any major cryptid, but as I said yesterday, I have a much better understanding of the people who endorse those North American primates and other creatures and why they endorse them. I will join the new ICS and wish it the best of luck.
The Conference could have added someone from the Florida
wildlife departments to talk about local creatures and activities of interest,
such as the Florida panther, the known and suspected colonies of escaped
monkeys (and reportedly apes), and the persistent reports that other out of
place mammals, like the jaguarondi, may have become established. This should be
standard practice wherever future conferences are held: take advantage of the
local wildlife and the expertise available to discuss it, such as getting someone from Maine in to talk about what they think happened to the state's panthers and why they think recent reports are erroneous. While I know Loren
tried to get quite a few people who could not make it, the meeting also could
have used a speaker or two more skeptical of the major cryptids.
I would have like an anthropologist to review
the ideas about possible ancestors and routes of travel for sasquatch ancestors’
arrival in North America, a topic none of the sasquatch-related speakers
addressed. This was the conference’s most significant omission, scientifically.
I should have pressed more on it, but the presenters were talking about what
they think IS, rather than how it came to be.
Overall, though, I’d like to say again that this meeting was
valuable, and that people who think cryptozoology is a complete waste of time should
come to the next one and listen and discuss and debate: we’d all be better off
for that. From my experience with this crowd, such a person would generate a lot of discussion but wouldn't have to fear being ostracized or dunked in a river: certainly I didn't get anything but polite argument when I expressed concerns about the science. I was impressed by the depth and breadth of knowledge on display,
even if I disagree about some of the conclusions. I had a great time. See ya’ll in Portland, I hope!
Tuesday, January 05, 2016
ICM Conference, Day 2 (updated and completed entry)
International Cryptozoology Museum Conference
Day 2
January 5, 2016
Today was the full day of presentations here at the ICM
conference. Not to throw in a plug, but the Casa Monica is a great old hotel,
updated with all the amenities, and Loren Coleman of the ICM did a great job in
picking the hotel and getting everyone an affordable rate at the height of
tourist season.
I’d forgotten how touristy Florida was: the tackiness is so
assertive that a kind of grandeur creeps into it. It’s different from the tackiness you see in
most tourist spots, though: in Florida, it’s an affectionate kind of tacky,
where everyone, locals and visitors, is in on the joke and no one takes it too
seriously. This is the first European
city in the Americas, and there’s a lot of real history showing its face amid
the T-shirt shops.
Anyway, today was all about presentations. I am a skeptic of
most cryptozoolgical claims: it would take more than we have now to make me
believe in huge unknown American primates or Mongolian death worms. But the level of science in the presentations was frankly higher
than I’d expected, and I came away understanding much better WHY the convinced
people are convinced. People who are
sure cryptozoology has nothing to offer science should spend more time with
these folks. At the very least, their
work tells us more about folklore, beliefs, and the way we view nature. At the
most, it may yet point the way to some major discoveries. (BTW, these are in the order I wrote them up, not exactly the order they were presented in.)
My presentation on bears was very well received. I pointed out
mysteries that still exist with bears (the reported giant black variety of the
Kamchatka brown bear) while arguing that other questions, such as the identity
of the odd grizzly known as MacFarlane’s bear, can be put to rest. Bears offer
many lessons for cryptozoologists, from the ways they are tracked and studied
to the attitudes of officialdom toward inconvenient reports. I gave the presentation to Loren and will
share it with anyone who asks.
My day: photo by Michelle Souliere of the ICM (I'm having some trouble downloading images from my phone, but will get it done.)
French cryptozoologist Michael Raynal couldn’t attend in
person or by Skype, so Loren Coleman did his presentation on the giant octopus
of St. Augustine. It was a fascinating presentation, with a lot of old news
clippings and photos, with Dr. Paul LeBlond (see below), a Canadian, helping out by translating some verbiage from
the French. The carcass that came ashore in 1896, was, very probably,
a sperm whale’s blubber/skin/connective tissue, but as long as we’re not absolutely
certain, some mystery – and some fun – remains. (Or I hope it does: personally I write this off now as a whale. As usual, I hope I'm wrong.) Terry Cullen, a herpetological
genetics expert in attendance, suggested the newest tests should be done on the
bits of tissue that still remain as samples. Loren made the interesting point that the tourist mecca of St. Augustine has somehow missed making any financial hay out of this event: indeed, local shops hold nothing about it at all.
Archaeologist/anthropologist Kathy Strain gave a very thought-provoking presentation about the prevalence of Sasquatch-type creatures in Native American lore. I knew there were a lot of legends, stories, and, supposedly, history about such creatures, but I had no idea how ubiquitous it was. “Hairy Man” type creatures exist in art, basketry, songs, dances, totem poles, and oral histories, much of it pre-Columbian. While there are many variations, a common and amusing one was that females carried baskets and swept up bad children to take them away to eat, while males, often half-human, sort of blundered around eating mostly nuts and shellfish. Strain showed old films of dances, showed pictographs of Hairy Man people weeping (because humans were afraid of them), and played back a haunting song from one tribe that only women were allowed to sing (it asked the Hairy Man to come take away the spirits of the dead at a funeral.) Since many Western stories are about real animals endowed with fanciful characteristics, she argues, these kinds of beliefs don’t mean the animals are not real. When I asked how a non-expert could differentiate between spiritual and physical creatures in Native American tales, she explained that a creature could be either or both, just as Christians and others believe we are both body and spirit/soul. The art object she showed that stuck with me was a centuries-old Haida mask decorated with horsehair that looks so much like an ape that she is stumped to suggest what else it could be, and I had the same reaction. While many cultures can tell visitors what they want to hear, either to please them or to pull their legs, Strain believes the unbroken continuity of countless tribes’ beliefs across ages indicate that recent additions don’t detract from the essential point that those who lived here before Columbus widely believed such creatures were real, and many believe they are here still. (Native Americans believe that, however their own ancestors arrived in North America, the hairy ones were already here just as all the other animals were.) None of this adds up to hard evidence of existence, but collectively it's a bit challenging to just dismiss as myth.
Dr. LeBlond, a physicist and oceanographer whose curiosity
drew him into the “Caddy” business some years ago, opened by describing two
recurrent “sea monster” motifs of First Nations people in the British Columbia
and adjoining areas. What’s come to be called “Caddy” is also well known
locally, and LeBlond has amassed a large collection of sightings which he believes
make the two most important criteria: 1) Clearly an animal, and 2) not a KNOWN
animal. Plotting these by length from 10 feet (noting that 10-footers could be
seals), to 100-footers (mistaken whales?) yields a cluster at 40-59 feet. He notes that sighting areas do not stay
static over time: that is, you can have a run of sightings in one area, then a
gap of several years before that area produces another sighting. On the complex
issue of the Nash video of numerous animals which appear to be harassing a pod
of belugas, he notes the animals turned back when they neared a fishing boat’s
nets, and, while features like flippers were never seen, the front ends seemed to
have a profile something like a Boeing 747 with its bulbous nose section. At
one point, in a video segment which is either lost or taped over, LeBlond and
cryptozoologist John Kirk (viewing it separately) saw a head, a bit like a
seal’s but much more oval in horizontal cross-section when seen from the front
and with a smaller neck, pop up and look toward the camera. I discussed with
him afterward the question of how sure he was that a drawing of this,
circulated widely in the cryptozoological community and in his latest book, was
accurate. He was cautious about it: it matched what he remembered, but with he
and Kirk contributing what they thought the tape showed at a considerable
distance to an artist, the final drawing is “about five steps removed” from
what the actual animal looks like, and there is some margin for error.
Archaeologist/anthropologist Kathy Strain gave a very thought-provoking presentation about the prevalence of Sasquatch-type creatures in Native American lore. I knew there were a lot of legends, stories, and, supposedly, history about such creatures, but I had no idea how ubiquitous it was. “Hairy Man” type creatures exist in art, basketry, songs, dances, totem poles, and oral histories, much of it pre-Columbian. While there are many variations, a common and amusing one was that females carried baskets and swept up bad children to take them away to eat, while males, often half-human, sort of blundered around eating mostly nuts and shellfish. Strain showed old films of dances, showed pictographs of Hairy Man people weeping (because humans were afraid of them), and played back a haunting song from one tribe that only women were allowed to sing (it asked the Hairy Man to come take away the spirits of the dead at a funeral.) Since many Western stories are about real animals endowed with fanciful characteristics, she argues, these kinds of beliefs don’t mean the animals are not real. When I asked how a non-expert could differentiate between spiritual and physical creatures in Native American tales, she explained that a creature could be either or both, just as Christians and others believe we are both body and spirit/soul. The art object she showed that stuck with me was a centuries-old Haida mask decorated with horsehair that looks so much like an ape that she is stumped to suggest what else it could be, and I had the same reaction. While many cultures can tell visitors what they want to hear, either to please them or to pull their legs, Strain believes the unbroken continuity of countless tribes’ beliefs across ages indicate that recent additions don’t detract from the essential point that those who lived here before Columbus widely believed such creatures were real, and many believe they are here still. (Native Americans believe that, however their own ancestors arrived in North America, the hairy ones were already here just as all the other animals were.) None of this adds up to hard evidence of existence, but collectively it's a bit challenging to just dismiss as myth.
Cliff Barackman gave a very good tutorial on footprints,
focusing mostly on mystery primates but with other examples. He stressed that a
footprint is not an image of the foot: it is an image of the damage the foot
did to the ground, which may be quite different. Indeed, two footprints made in succession by
the same animal can look different, and footprints' origin can be disguised by various forces: for example, overlapping bear tracks can look surprisingly human. A
common trait in fake sasquatch feet is the lack of flexibility: Barackman
argues the real primate he believes exists has very flexible feet (some experts
say there is a mid-tarsal break, essentially an extra joint, but Cliff doesn’t
go that far). He dismisses three- and four-toed impressions as hoaxes. He argues several sets of “real” tracks have
very clear dermal ridges, although he did not really address how wide the
variation is in what are deemed by various researchers to be authentic
five-toed sasquatch tracks. On the
rarity of apparent juvenile impressions, he and others at the conference have
noted that genuine juvenile footprints might be taken for bare human feet. Whatever one thinks of sasquatch, he imparted
a great deal of useful information, especially for us suburban folk trying to
understand technical discussions over footprints. He has collected some 50
impressions of Sumatra’s orang-pendek and, while he believes this is a real
animal, doesn’t believe it’s related to the Flores “hobbits” – the widely
separated big toe is distinctly ape-like.
I asked him about one of the most puzzling footprints of all
time, that photographed in the snows of Everest by Shipton and Ward, and he
felt this was not related to sasquatch-type creatures or the orang-pendek: if it was a genuine
print, it belonged to some other species.
Biologist and TV host Pat Spain of the series Beast Hunters stood up, and I'm glad he was late in the day because following his act would have been impossible. Funny, personable, and persuasive, he explained how a biologist who started by studying shellfish (he once submitted a paper subtitled "Sprat Pain by Pat Spain" ended up chasing cryptids all over the world. Along the way, he discovered that watching a Westerner use the latrine is entertainment in a remote Cameroon village and that young female orangutans are capable of molesting a human male in the most intimate, uncomfortable, and embarrassing ways possible.
He felt at least two animals, mokele-mbembe and the Mongolian death worm, were cultural constructs, and explained what purpose each legend served in its respective culture. He noted that with mokele-mbembe, looking at pictures of different animals has been gamed by local entrepreneurs: people looked to the guides for nods on whether they should say a certain animal lived in their area.
Spain didn't see an orang-pendek but is convinced they exist. The local people he worked with in Sumatra not only seemed truthful but a bit awed by the animal's humanlike locomotion: while it may be a type of gibbon, it walks bipedally by nature, without the usual gibbon arm-balancing. He emphasized the people he talked to knew every detail of the lives of gibbons, orangutans, and other local primates. Most memorably, he reported a conversation with Dr. Mike Morwood, the discoverer of the 18,000-year-old Flores "hobbits," who told Spain he had hard evidence, which he planned to publish, showing that species was alive into the 1920s! The evidence was apparently lost or misplaced with the scientist's premature death of cancer in 2013, although it may lie somewhere in his archives awaiting rediscovery. Someone really needs to push this hard and find out what he had.
Likewise, the certainty of a tribe Spain befriended in the Amazon (by going through an incredibly painful ritual involving gloves filled with huge stinging ants) about the mapinguari made him feel some kind of ground sloth was a distinct possibility. He also thinks some form of large sea creature exists within the "Caddy" data. He doesn't know what it is, but the number of sincere witnesses he talked to, given the fact that "every marine scientist believes there are some large animals left undiscovered," makes him fairly certain something is afoot.
Spain argued hard that cryptozoology and "mainstream" biology are mutually supporting: his work on Caddy included looking at the oarfish as a candidate and funded the first-ever CAT scan of an oarfish, producing a trove of data on that very strange creature.
I asked Spain about the use of cryptozoology in science education, something I've proposed a panel on for the June 2016 Denver ComiCon. He thinks it's very valuable and described how he's gotten young people to learn about the woods by suggesting they look for Bigfoot and along the way studying animal tracking, ecology, and the food chain. Loren Coleman asked him if mokele-mbembe might be, not a reptile, but a semi-aquatic rhino: Spain is certain, though, that the area he examined houses nothing exceptional. (The geology of the area, he noted, ruled out any underground or underwater caves, although he did not go to one other site, Lake Tele: it's unreachable due to conflicts. )
We ended up at a theater watching Revenge of the Creature, the slightly inferior but still impressive sequel to The Creature from the Black Lagoon. The Lagoon films remain surprisingly effective and affecting: the creature's loneliness and his torment at being shocked by scientists studying his learning capability come through well, and the suits remain superb even on close examination.
And so ended a very, very interesting day.
Biologist and TV host Pat Spain of the series Beast Hunters stood up, and I'm glad he was late in the day because following his act would have been impossible. Funny, personable, and persuasive, he explained how a biologist who started by studying shellfish (he once submitted a paper subtitled "Sprat Pain by Pat Spain" ended up chasing cryptids all over the world. Along the way, he discovered that watching a Westerner use the latrine is entertainment in a remote Cameroon village and that young female orangutans are capable of molesting a human male in the most intimate, uncomfortable, and embarrassing ways possible.
He felt at least two animals, mokele-mbembe and the Mongolian death worm, were cultural constructs, and explained what purpose each legend served in its respective culture. He noted that with mokele-mbembe, looking at pictures of different animals has been gamed by local entrepreneurs: people looked to the guides for nods on whether they should say a certain animal lived in their area.
Spain didn't see an orang-pendek but is convinced they exist. The local people he worked with in Sumatra not only seemed truthful but a bit awed by the animal's humanlike locomotion: while it may be a type of gibbon, it walks bipedally by nature, without the usual gibbon arm-balancing. He emphasized the people he talked to knew every detail of the lives of gibbons, orangutans, and other local primates. Most memorably, he reported a conversation with Dr. Mike Morwood, the discoverer of the 18,000-year-old Flores "hobbits," who told Spain he had hard evidence, which he planned to publish, showing that species was alive into the 1920s! The evidence was apparently lost or misplaced with the scientist's premature death of cancer in 2013, although it may lie somewhere in his archives awaiting rediscovery. Someone really needs to push this hard and find out what he had.
Likewise, the certainty of a tribe Spain befriended in the Amazon (by going through an incredibly painful ritual involving gloves filled with huge stinging ants) about the mapinguari made him feel some kind of ground sloth was a distinct possibility. He also thinks some form of large sea creature exists within the "Caddy" data. He doesn't know what it is, but the number of sincere witnesses he talked to, given the fact that "every marine scientist believes there are some large animals left undiscovered," makes him fairly certain something is afoot.
Spain argued hard that cryptozoology and "mainstream" biology are mutually supporting: his work on Caddy included looking at the oarfish as a candidate and funded the first-ever CAT scan of an oarfish, producing a trove of data on that very strange creature.
I asked Spain about the use of cryptozoology in science education, something I've proposed a panel on for the June 2016 Denver ComiCon. He thinks it's very valuable and described how he's gotten young people to learn about the woods by suggesting they look for Bigfoot and along the way studying animal tracking, ecology, and the food chain. Loren Coleman asked him if mokele-mbembe might be, not a reptile, but a semi-aquatic rhino: Spain is certain, though, that the area he examined houses nothing exceptional. (The geology of the area, he noted, ruled out any underground or underwater caves, although he did not go to one other site, Lake Tele: it's unreachable due to conflicts. )
We ended up at a theater watching Revenge of the Creature, the slightly inferior but still impressive sequel to The Creature from the Black Lagoon. The Lagoon films remain surprisingly effective and affecting: the creature's loneliness and his torment at being shocked by scientists studying his learning capability come through well, and the suits remain superb even on close examination.
And so ended a very, very interesting day.