http://bigfootdiscoveryproject.blogspot.com/2013_01_01_archive.htm
This was posted on a Facebook group I belonged to several days ago and I immediately send a notice to Dr Don Jeffrey Meldrum about it. I shall let the original publication tell the story as it was reprinted below:
www.bigfootdiscoveryproject.com February 17, 2008 Volume 3 Number 10
Message from the Curator
Now that we have our first bit of potential
“physical evidence” I felt inspired to share it
here even though we have not yet determined
exactly what it is. Our newest member, Matt,
came in and donated a tooth to the museum
collection. It appears to be an unusually large
human molar with the enamel cap worn down
to the pulp. About 1/3 of the tooth is missing
and both of the roots are broken off; one more
so than the other. It appears to be old and
fossilized and when I searched online for an
image that matches there were only two that
came close so far: one was a bear tooth, the
other a Neanderthal tooth (Emphasis added).
He found the tooth in 2002 in
Scotts Valley where people dig for
shark’s teeth. It was laying on the ground in
the woods above the sand cliff where people
normally dig. So far I’ve sent an email to
paleoanthropologist Dennis Etler asking him
to stop by and take a look at it. He has not
come in yet, although he said he would.
We’ve received quite a number of encounter
stories since the museum opened three years
ago. I receive reports on almost a weekly
basis in the museum; it literally adds up to an
average of a little over one story per week. I
say “story” rather than “report”to differentiate
between something we can follow-up on
(report) and other anecdotes that cannot be
further researched (stories). The situation here
is such that sometimes I’m dealing with
several visitors at once; hearing a story while
ringing up a sale at the same time, for
example. Frequently the visitor is hurried for
time or being tugged on by companions or
children and the story is truncated or sketchy.
For these and various other reasons, including
my own mistakes, I occasionally don’t catch
their name and phone number, and/or the notes
I took can’t be understood when I read them
again months later. I’m working on making
this happen less often, as some of the best
stories I have are anonymous, although I did
look the person in the eye when hearing the
story (except the time or two I’ve heard a story
over the phone).
My opinion is that the tooth does NOT resemble a bear's molar closely but it IS avery good match for a Neanderthal molar. Neanderthal crowns are usually worn very flat and their roots are also unusually expanded or inflated, a condition known as Taurodontism (Bull-toothed)
The Scotts Valley (California) tooth exhibits this diagnostic condition exactly.
A Neanderthal molar tooth from a recent internet news article on Neanderthal diet for comparison
A selection of Neanderthal teeth
A penny just happens to be almost an exact centimeter in diameter. Measure it yourself and see!
That means the size of the big tooth in the museum and the Neanderthal tooth are very comparable.
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Petra co Oase "Early modern" & Shanidar Neanderthal
It would appear from this much alone that there was genetic exchange between the early European modern peoples and Neanderthals: African early moderns do not have a braincase anywhere near this shape in profile. |
Interesting comparison. I showed paleoanthropologist Lee Berger some pictures and he said that he thinks it may be a fossil. He couldn't be sure though, as he had only the pictures from Mr. Rugg's video. Good job pointing the taurodontism in the roots out, I hadn't noticed that. I think that your analysis will be helpful to me, as I am doing a large research article on the Bushmen reports from Northwestern North America. Surprisingly, it really does seem like they are Neanderthals! Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHere's the article that I've been mentioning: Bizarre Zoology: Wildmen of the Northwest http://bizarrezoology.blogspot.com/2013/02/wildmen-of-northwest.html?spref=tw
ReplyDeleteI finally come to the realization that there are a different species than the Sasquatch bipedal apes in North America. You helped inspire the article, thank you!