To: wintertime
No, under definition-enhancing and slight magnification, one can clearly make out the large, flapping pachyderm-type ears. It's either a mammoth, or a mammoth-elephant clone, or a whole new, extremely rare species.
It is not a bear with a big fish. What a highly unimaginative and banal dismissal of some of the most scientifically important footage in our lifetime, especially for so purportedly erudite and considered a cognoscenti.
Just damn.
;-\
I'm apalled.
69 posted on
02/08/2012 6:36:57 PM PST by
Gargantua
(Men are CREATED equal, but 21 years later... you get the picture.)
To: Gargantua
My husband was born in Alaska. He told me the natives said the last Mammoth was seen in the 1800s. I posted this info a while back.
70 posted on
02/08/2012 6:53:42 PM PST by
Cowgirl
To: Gargantua
My husband was born in Alaska. He told me the natives said the last Mammoth was seen in the 1800s. I posted this info a while back.
71 posted on
02/08/2012 6:55:09 PM PST by
Cowgirl
To: Gargantua; Eaker
I am in Mexico and I took some pictures of a Chubacabra but I lost them. If you will meet me in Piedras Negras in El Mercado you can go with me and we will take some more, it will make us famous. You will know me when you see me, I am a big guy, 6'6” with bright red hair. Can't miss me.
Eaker will go with us.:D
74 posted on
02/08/2012 7:09:41 PM PST by
Ditter
To: Gargantua
I spotted the flappy pachy ears without any definition-enhancement. Anyone thinking bear should take a second look for those ears.
I can see where someone would mistake it for a wooly mammoth with a salmon though:)
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