Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Bigfoot Removes Chunks Of Trees

Bigfoot, specifically the Australian Yowie, is said to bite out large chunks of trees searching for wood-boring grubs. In the center of the wood left you can see a hollow where a tasty grub once lived. The bites are usually four to seven feet off the ground, and large, ill-defined imprints from her feet can be sometimes seen. Fangs marks can even be seen occasionally. The Bigfoot of North America will strip the bark of trees for food. Pages 101-103, from "The Yowie" (2006) by Tony Healey and Paul Cropper.

Quick Fact: In 1940, two archaeologists found two very well-preserved bodies under guano in Spirit Lake which is near Fallon, Nevada. Fortunately, these bodies were not sent to the Smithsonian Institution because they would have been stored and access to them severely limited as the Smithsonian does not want to admit that the Indians were not the "First Nations." Someone was here before them. Fortunately, the two, very tall, bodies were stored in a Nevada museum.
    Forty-six years later (1996) an anthropologist at the University of California found out about them and decided to age them with advance models of mass spectrometry. They were found to be 9,400 years old. The Shoshone-Paiute Tribe of Fallon tried to snatch the bodies. The Bureau Of Land Management, Department Of The Interior, agreed with their efforts, of course. Let's not complicate future exploitation of the land and its resources with the recognition that white giants lived here before the so-called First Nations. However, a judge allowed DNA testing that revealed the two bodies were of Caucasian origin with long faces and craniums most closely resembling Nordic or Ainu (a white, indigenous race in Japan). Pages 275-78 from "Giants Who Ruled America" (2014) by Richard Dewhurst.

Thank you for your visit and hope you come back tomorrow. These Wild Men and Women scattered about Mother Earth need your attention and protection.
"Your Daily Bigfoot" is by Peter Nickerson, B.A. (Philosophy, William and Mary, '68) plus an MS and an MSW. 

   

No comments: