Posted on 03/29/2022 10:03:06 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Hadrosaurs in south Jersey, T-Rexes and Trikes in the Dakotas, Mosasaurs in the Netherlands, lots of places. To be preserved they had to be buried rather soon after death; to be found the overlying layers had to have worn away or digging had to have uncovered them. Marl pits in south Jersey are a good example; marl was mined as a source of potash.
The book was Abominable Snowmen: Legend Come to Life. A great read about worldwide Squatch varieties.
Thanks - I wasn’t aware of that one.
For a lot longer than 50 years:
https://bigfootsightings.org/theodore-roosevelts-bigfoot-story/
(What it actually IS is another question.)
This topic was posted , thanks nickcarraway. And thanks JimRed for pointing out the obvious in response to a trope, but trope regurgitators can't be reasoned with.
One of my guilty pleasures has been watching the program :Finding Bigfoot” on the Animal Planet channel: “We interviewed a witness who saw a Sasquatch walk by this spot five years ago. As a result, we’re going to camp here for one night in this one particular spot in this 300,000 acre forest in the hope that he’ll come by again.”
“exponential growth in high quality digital cameras in the last 20 years would have given us something newer and better”
Well, I had a high speed Canon DLSR camera and came across an all-fours print in what used to be shallow water but was dried up. From toes to shins, knees, elbows, forearms and palms. Now, who would go barefoot into a shallow pond, get down on all fours and ostensibly drink the water? I took a couple pictures. Went home and transferred them to my computer. When I opened them up they were all-white. A picture, but total white, no nothing. Never happened before or since with that or any other digital camera of mine.
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