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Showing posts with label Shortfaced Bears. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shortfaced Bears. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 January 2013

Posting on Giant Bears

Posting on Giant Bears by Rephaim 23:

http://rephaim23.wordpress.com/2012/11/23/giant-bears-historic-and-ancient/

It is interesting that even though the skin of "Vetularctos" has been ruled out as a surviving Shortfaced bear at the Smithsonian (there was a real possibility of DNA contamination from regular brown bear skins stored together with it for several decades), there remain several reports of unusually large, unusually Short-faced bears killed in Alaska back in the earliers, and this article mentions several of those on the end.

Just to give you a sample, look at the reconstructions:



Sunday, 7 October 2012

Bigfoot Evidence "Hybrid"

Saturday, October 6, 2012


"I Would Say It Was Some Hybrid Creature Between, a Mix Between a Polar Bear, Arctic Wolf, An Ape and Some Big Cat" [Bigfoot Sightings]


Editor's Note: This is a post by Bigfoot Evidence contributor M. Strudwick, a Sasquatch enthusiast.

This is an account kindly given to us by Billy Hunter, of Michigan. He is well educated, an environmentalist, a herpetologist and has a wide knowledge of animals, especially species, which live within the United States.

We hope you enjoy his true account of a night, he will never forget.

It´s 1995 I'm way north in the upper peninsula Michigan, just at the border on the east near Canada. During this time I was training to be a Marine so my interest were heavily into guns, gadgets, martial arts, and fitness, that kind of thing.

We had set up camp (my grandpa, one of my uncles, his two boys, and four family friends).

There was also another group close-by that we had met up with (two other families, good people we knew from another hunt).

We started a fire to cook, we had fished earlier and did well, keep in mind that even though my grandpa and his son are both retired Marines we are using a lot of crap, like depth finders, all this tracking and scanning crap.

Johnny my cousin had a pair of night vision goggles. I was carrying a H&K 36 and a H&K Socom USP (way overkill for deer and maybe even illegal).

But we were really role playing for a combat and situation decision training.

Simulating a new strategy for tactical team work with the sniper (me) calling the shots instead of the lead rifle-man. Turning a five man crew into three teams (it was supposed to be six but James was to tired).

Now it's like 3 to 4 am, just my cousins (Jason, EC) and my ROTC classmates (Andrew, Tommy) and me, in 4ft of snow and an almost full moon, it was like daylight.

Finally we come to a beautiful clearing. It was kind of breath taking and took longer than normal to take it all in, a sparkling flowing stream, moonlit lake, several deer with big points too, a slight wind making everything seem like it's breathing. You could just slightly here a water-fall, not a big one though in the distance.

We had a perfect vantage point, elevated, dry, and unseen. I was looking at this big ass deer, big ass antlers, thinking to myself “I'm gonna go for the heart”, waiting for Jason to say “I'm clear”.

Behind the group of dear were a bunch of trees and not a lot of brush, you could see rows and rows of trees behind for a few yards. I saw something move in between the trees, something big, but I could not make it out with my rifle sight (I said earlier it was a H&K ) so I pulled out my snipe to get a better view, a PSG1.

In my head I'm thinking “OK we got a mountain lion or big cat to deal with, or wolf maybe”,

I definitely would not want to shoot something like that.

I slide up a little more to get a better view, I get up under this huge pine tree, it was awesome, a huge open space under the tree, a place to put my pack down, get comfortable all without being seen..

I wanted it to be silent but everything was moving and breathing, chirping, you know it was really weird, just when stuff settled down a damn bat would fly by or something.

I just had to keep my eyes moving all the time.

So I'm up almost eye level with the trees, looking down at this large group of deer, more than a dozen, too many to see in the sight at the same time.

I send Jason and EC to the east, Drew and Tommy to the west, behind me is lake Superior, right where the two Great Lakes meet.

Any shot I take is extra deadly at this angle and I never miss on the first shot for whatever reason.

I decide to take out the big guy I mentioned earlier.

There I sat waiting for them to give me the OK to shoot, I didn't know what was behind them and I was not going to shoot into the woods, or who knows where else in case of a miss.

But he's in my sights, I sit still waiting, still waiting, I radio to them "You good?"

A little time passes then Jason replies "Yea all good, just having some trouble navigating"

Drew replies “Yep, in position, your clear, take your shot".

So I'm sitting there, I radio J again "All right J let me know".

I´m stuck on this huge deer, feeling so exited, because to be honest I don´t know shit about deer hunting, but I know Pa is going to flip out when we drag this thing in.

All of sudden every last deer out there looks up to the immediate right all at once. I also turned, scanning almost full circle, seeing nothing, looking back at them, by then some had started to head away, slowly though, with some still looking in that direction.

I radio to Drew "You see what they're looking at?"

Drew replies "I was gonna ask you the same thing, what´s up with the shot?"

I reply "Waiting on J still"

I get back in on the thing I saw moving previously, nothing is happening at first I'm just scanning back and forth.

J finally radios in “They are in position and the deer are walking directly towards them, about 60 yards away”.

Then IT moves again, I zoom in tight on this big animal, in a low part of a very big, branching tree. The tree is covered in snow and this thing is stark white, I still could n´t even fix my eyes right to figure out what the hell the thing was so I just watching, eyes peeled.

I radio out "CAN ANYONE SEE TANGO BEHIND ROCKY IN THE MAIN TREE????" (Rocky is our code for target/ Tango is the enemy) Not yelling, but very direct and obvious.

So I am targeting this thing, but can't make it out, it was just like a big piece of white snow that crawled for second.

I AM TRIPPING NOW...then a stupid bird flutters and lands and I am like “Fuck off, out of the way!!”

I radio "Did anyone fucking see THAT????"

Their response "What, the bird?"

Then this BIG ASS THING, launches off the branch, lands heels first in the snow and charges at the last few deer that was left, they did not even have time to move.

Meanwhile on the radio someone was attempting to say the scientific name for the bird, someone saying really fast instructions and orders. Then Tommy (we call him general) saying "EC get on the phone, everyone mark your areas, Andrew double back to camp, Billy shot is yours"

Every voice jittery and out of breathe, (obviously running) with me wondering, "Does anyone know, what the fuck that is, what is it, what is it?"

Over the radio, "Polar bear",

"That's not a fucking polar bear",

"Some kind of gorilla",

"Billy shoot it!",

"I'm gonna shoot it",

"It doesn't have a tail,"

"Dear god",

"Dude it's a fucking wet Polar bear".

I thought to myself that it must be some hybrid creature up here in the cold and I'd never seen anything like it, believe me I know my animals and my science.

I take my shot but it does not even make the creature flinch...then another and it turns and runs.

That was no Polar Bear!

Here is my best description..

At first it landed, you could tell that it could probably stand up, it stooped down quick and began to run kind of like a cat, I could not make out if it was running with it's fist or fingers, it was weird.

It had these crazy ridges all over it's body, really small (like a reptile maybe?).

Fur like a Pit bull has, a little thicker though, all white but you could still see black skin on the face and belly. It looked like a black or Asian man (because of the face), with a white gorilla suit on, a muscle suit on under that too.

I know it sounds crazy but today I would say it was some hybrid creature between, a mix between a Polar bear, Arctic Wolf, An Ape and some Big Cat, looking 7 foot tall, maybe more.

It was very light on it's feet, had super-strength, angry as fuck for no good reason, and almost bulletproof!

As soon as I figured it was long gone, I radioed the others, we grouped, all of us were silent, unsure of what had just happened. As we got to camp we just exploded, all these questions flying around at one another.

We did not know what we´d seen, but we knew we would not want to see it again.

To this day all I can say is “We saw the Abominable Snowman”.
 
Im going to say that this "Hybrid" creature is probably another one of those giant short-faced bears we hear about being reported off and on. Frequeny features in such reportscatlike and bearlike features, a short broad face but long legs about the same proportions of a gorilla, and an unexpected tendancy to walk upright. They are markedly bigger than even grizzly or polar bears:

 

top - short faced bear ( exstinct )
middle - polar bear
bottom - grizzly bear


And More Pictures Here

Saturday, 8 September 2012

Swamp Ape Search Finds Giant Sloth

From the Global Warming and Terraforming Terra site. I am reprinting it exactly the way it was run although I do not endorse the conclusions. I find the clawed tracks to be composite bear tracks. But I'll let the original article speak for itself:

Posted: 07 Sep 2012 12:00 AM PDT






You were right the first time lady, you saw a Giant Sloth. It can run on all fours and it can run upright. The gait is almost primate like except there is a sideways sway observed in another report. Another swamp ape reports catches it picking at road kill.

It is plausible that both the bigfoot and the giant sloth operate in the South, however the Giant sloth is well adapted for Southern Swamps while the Bigfoot is no better adapted than we are. In the event this is only the second report that recognized a giant Sloth when they saw one.


I am sorry to say that our silly assumption that the Giant sloth was a slow moving critter is dead wrong. We already knew that from the other reports we are uncovering but this makes it explicitly clear.

Much more important is that the natural habitat for a giant sloth is up in large old trees able to support their path-finding even deep into swamps were nothing can follow them. It is also comfortable in water when it needs to be which is why we have observed mud covered examples.

The creature is certainly as solitary as the Bigfoot appears to be and it can range widely. It is not limited to a specific terrain and has been spotted even in this short review from swamps to high country.

The footprint is quite different from the wide Bigfoot print and is clearly clawed. This is the beginning of a search.


Quest for Swamp Ape

by Linda Florea

September 5, 2012

WINTER HAVEN -- It's had more sightings than Elvis.


They call it Wookie in Louisiana, Yeti in Nepal, Yowie in Australia and Susquatch in Canada. In Florida, it's called Swamp Ape, Skunk Ape, Stink Ape or Stink Man. More plainly put, Bigfoot.

For one local man, finding the creature has become like searching for the Holy Grail, and he is teaming up with other believers the first week in November for a field-research class through Florida Keys Community College. He hopes to bring back proof of its existence.


"I know it's there. I know it on several levels," said Scott Marlowe, a founder of the Pangea Institute in Winter Haven and instructor of an online class in cryptozoology, the study of creatures that may or may not exist, through Florida Keys Community College.


"Of all the species on earth, man is presumed to be the only one that has one example of its genus -- the only genus that has only one species still alive. All other species have more than one."


Marlowe isn't the only one with faith that the creature exists.


Patricia Edwards of Lakeland has seen what she believes is the Swamp Ape in the Green Swamp. Although her sighting was in the fall of 2002, it was not until she read about another sighting that she decided to go public.


It began when she was going to visit a relative in an Ocala hospital. The morning was clear, and she was driving along Country Road 471, a long, straight stretch of road through the Green Swamp. She said she saw something less than a half block away.


"If I live to be a couple hundred years old, the story will not change," said Edwards, 69. "There was very little traffic and I see something that ran out in front of me. It looked like a giant sloth except I know they're slow moving -- this one moved fast and dove down into the edge of the road into a ditch area.''

"It started out running, galloping on fours like a dog, but when it dove I could see the arms come up. It was sizable, almost like a bear, but not a bear, not the way its arms moved."

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Booger Bears





















This is a matter wherin I had early input in a matter that Ivan Sanderson and his widow claimed no knowledge of the subject. In 1967 in Kentucky, a mysterious creature that walked on its hind feet and stood between 6 and 7 feet tall was stealing cattle. I had read the account in a scholastic magazine and sent in a report to the SITU. At that time I received the reply "It sounds as though you are talking about an ABSM" and sure enough, the event is included in the "Miscellaneous Bigfoot" sightings included in John Keel's Mysterious Beings, Formerly Strange Creatures From Time and Space, listed under Kentucky in 1967. Only that was not the whole story: the creature had been caught and killed and was reported to have both catlike and doglike features, a sort of short-faced bear that weighed something like 650 pounds and was clearly not a black bear. When I had a radio interview on the Oopa Loopa cafe some years back, the owner of the Internet cafe said he had heard of the incident because he had lived near that area at the time. The animal had been baited out by a calf tied to a stake and then shot when it came for the calf. Rick Ozman (  http://pulse.yahoo.com/_5HISDSKVDSASIOBLDIYZIUX6YA
 Owner of the Blog) gave the Native name for the creature over the air which sounded like Wod or Wog. At any rate, his recollection confirmed mine and much improved over the news clippings which the SITU had on the subject.





















In going over the various "Big Hairy Monster" reports of the Eastern United States, I began to notice that some of them were describing a sort of short-faced bear generally conforming to this sighting, often compared to a cat-faced bear or an African lion standing on its hind legs. The usual designation in the Apallachian mountain region and the Ozarks is "Booger Bear" to distinguish it from the common black bear, and it is said to be much larger (and particularly taller with a higher profile) and tending to walk on its hind legs. Sightings of such creatures are recorded in collections published by John Keel, Loren Coleman and Jerome Clark, but the general category not recognised in those collections. It is found over a wide area including Texas and Oklahoma to Florida and up into Canada indefinitely far, but over all that area only in small local enclaves where reports come with some regularity. The reports are much more common in mountain country than elsewhere but reports also occur in swamps and along river courses (they seem to travel along the riverbeds)



Arctodus, the Original "Grizzly Bear"







Ivan T. Sanderson mentions in Living Mammals of the World that what the early settlers in the West were calling a "Grizzly Bear" was a specialist predator on bison in the high plains area, a much different and much larger bear than the animal which we call the Grizzly, and one which appeaered to be extinct with the killing off of the bison. I take this unidentified bear to be a survival of the Ice-Age giant Shortfaced bear, Arctodus simius or "Monkeylike bear-creature." in an article about the puroported Vetularctos in Natural History magazine,reports of an unknown "Bulldog bear" able to carry off a moose were stated to come from Northwest Territories and even into Northern British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan. It was presumed these reports were related to a surviving Arctodus. The reports of this bear are outside the usual range of Grizzly bears and in fact the range of Sanderson's "Grizzly Bear Bison-eater" lived in an area outside of the usual range of the Grizzly bear. The reports of Shortfaced bears in the Midwestern areas of the USA are likewise outside of usual Grizzly bear range but are in the range where the Ice-age Arctodus once lived.

Similar reports also come from Far-Eastern Siberia.
Bering Sea huntsman Rodin Sivobolov of north Kamchatka reintroduced the cryptozoological creature in the late 80’s. From the description of natives, Sivobolov learned of a beast know alternatively as the Kainyn-Kutho (god bear) and Irkuiem (‘pants pulled down’). It was described as having forelegs longer than hind, and a bulge of fat between its legs that often reaches the ground, resembling pulled-down pants and giving the animal its second name. In 1989 there was a report of a mystery bear feared by Kamchatkan reindeer herders, and said to come across the Chukchi Sea on Alaskan ice floes. N.K. Vereshchagin proposed the most radical theory, in which he suggested the bear was surviving Actrodus simus, a giant prehistoric bear that stood almost 6 ft at the shoulder. It matched the Irkuimen in the fact that it had forelegs longer than hind, and in fact it had the limb proportions of a Gorilla.




McFarlanes bear of Canada’s Northwest Territory had an unusual cream-colored coat and an unusually formed head. Supposedly, one was shot at the Anderson River, and the animal’s skin and skull are now somewhere in the Smithsonian. Another account, possibly describing the same specimen, tells of a bear that was killed at Rendezvous Lake in 1816. An early taxonomist described the animal as ‘Buffy whitish’ with a golden-brown muzzle, and identified it as a new genus and species, Vetularctos inopinatus, claiming it probably was descended from the prehistoric short-faced bear. It could just have been an aberrant specimen, a unique subspecies, or a polar/grizzly bear cross (Ursus martimus x arctos). The specimen was later located in storage at the Smithsonan and DNA tests said it was an ordinary grizzly bear; however since the skin had been in storage together with many brown bear hides over many decades, some form of contamination could not be ruled out.



Reconstructions of Shortfaced Bears, Monkeybears, Bulldog Bears or even sometimes called "Man-faced Bears"





















In South America, the Red mountain bear, a small reddish-colored bear of the Muscarens Mountains of Columbia, is well-known to natives, and Peru reputedly houses the Pygmy brown bear, wich may very well be the same animal. Both animals are possible color variants of the spectacled bear Tremarctos, descendant of the ancient short-faced bears.

The Milne From Peru, Columbia, and Bolivia, is described as an enormous black bear living in the deep jungles of South America. The most famous encounter was by the famed explorer Leonard Clark in 1946, while floating down the Ucayali River in eastern Peru. He first came across the animal's footprints in the riverbank, measuring 14 inches long and resembling those of a giant man. The second day he found the source of the strange tracks – as they floated down the river, they passed a huge black bear, clawing apart a rotted tree infested with ants in order to get at the larva. As they passed, one on the crew members sharply slapped his paddle in the water, startling the bear so that leapt into the river and began to swim across. As the rafts neared the bear, it turned and swam towards them, either because it was curious, angry, or wanted to crawl out of the river. When the bear was within 3 feet of the raft, the crew leapt overboard, and knowing the animal would upset the craft, Leonard shot it with his pistol. Without his crew, unfortunately, Leonard could not drag the bear's carcass aboard before the piranhas started feeding on it, and was forced to abandon his specimen.





This depiction of an Ucumar shows a bear's distinctive ears, eyes and nose. The nails rather than claws on the hands and feet come from the asumption that the creature is like Bigfoot.



The Ucu, sometimes called Ucumar or Ukumar-zupai, is a reported Apelike or Bigfoot like creature thought to live in the mountainous regions in and around Chili and Argentina. The name is unfortunmately ambiguous and can be used to refer to a bear, bearlike monkey, monkeylike bear, bear-man or Bogey-bear with equal ease. The Ucu is described to be the size of a large dog and can walk erect. According to natives the Ucu likes to eat payo, a plant with an inside similar to cabbage, and emits a sound like uhu, uhu, uhu, which Ivan T. Sanderson compared to the noises reported by Albert Ostman, who claimed to have been held captive by a family of Sasquatch in 1924. (Bears and gorilla both also make a similar noise: so did King Kong in the 1933 movie)

One of the first documented sightings of the Ucu took place in May of 1958 when a group of campers in Rengo, 50 miles from Santiago, Chili, reported that they saw what they could only describe as an ape man. Police were called out to investigate; they took reports from the witnesses, one of which was Carlos Manuel Soto who swore that he had seen an enormous man covered with hair in the Cordilleras, one of the Santiago’s 6 provinces.

In 1956, geologist Audio L. Pich found seventeen inch long human like footprints on the Argentina side of the Andes Mountains at a height of over sixteen thousand feet. The following year similar tracks where discovered in the province of La Salta, Argentina. Not long after, residents of Tolor Grande informed newspaper reporters of a nightly chorus of what they described as eerie calls emanating from the near by Curu-Curu Mountains. The cries, which where attributed by the locals to a creature known as the Ukumar-zupai, frightened the community for some time, and according to anthropologist Pablo Latapi Ortega, traditions of these giant creatures continue to this very day in Argentina.

Size: 5 – 7 feet tall in more tropical areas [Patagonian Giant Ucu, 6-12 feet tall]

Variant names: Sachayoj, Ucu, Ukumar-zupai (in Tolar Grande). In Bolivia and Peru, the spectacled bear is known as Ucamari or Jucamari.

Physical description: Half man, half bear. Covered in long, shaggy black hair. Small eyes. Large hands and feet. sharp fangs in mouth.
Behavior: Bipedal. Makes eerie, ululating calls (“uhu, uhu”) at night. Eats vegetation and animal matter, wild fruit and honey.
Tracks: Humanlike. Length, 14-17 inches.

Habitat: Mountains, caves, wildreness and rocky areas.

Small and large Shortfaced bears, skeleton comparison from Bjorn Kurten.











Shape of Skeletons compared for La Brea Lion, Spotted Hyena, Brown Bear, Wolf and Arctodus the giant Short-faced bear, by Bjorn Kurten.


















Short-Faced Bear Map: Bjorn Kurten assumes that the larger Shortfaced beard of the Arctodus type colonised South America along the Atlantic coast while the smaller, Tremarctos-type shortfaced bears colonised alomg the Western part of the continent, along the Andes. The larger bears also went inland from the coast and could well be the ancestors of the Milne in Colombia and the Ucumars of Chile and Argentina








Map for distribution of bears in the world. In the case of the Larger Shortfaced bears, they are mostly reported in areas where brown bears aren't usually supposed to be found, except for the Irkuiem in Kamchatka, and they are supposed to come from Alaska.






[Please note also that bears are absent from large parts of Tibet in this map from Wikipedia]

Sources:
www.phenomenica.com
www.unknownexplorers.com
Ivan T. Sanderson, Abominable Snowmen: Legend Come to Life (1961)
..........Living Mammals of the World (1956, p. 201, under URSINES, Brown Bears)
John Keel, Strange Creatures From Time and Space
Jerome Clark and Loren Coleman, Creatures of the Outer Edge (1976)
Simon Chapman, The Monster of the Madidi: Searching for the Giant Ape of the Bolivian Jungle (London: Aurum, 2001)