"I'll kidnap the hairy one. That weird one? Yes, the one that acts like an animal and looks all messed up. I'll get her to be my slave and she can do all sorts of things."
Why would anyone want to kidnap her if she was so messed up?
I mean if she was as described then why would she be wanted by anyone for anything?
Or could have been an abandoned child and left to her own devices by the parents from one of those villages with African roots.
We're not told whether anybody checked. Presumably because nobody did. It could be ruled out by checking, but until someone does, there's little need for any more speculative theories.
Speculative theories are just about all we have to discuss regarding bigfootery.![]()
Actually, yes it does. According to the unsinkable rubber ducks that are bigfoot enthusiasts, Zana= relict hominid=bigfoot. This is how they "think." Some also believe that Sykes is on their side of the fence and the proof will be in "the paper."But this has nothing to do with bigfootery any more.
It's a fascinating, if rather harrowing, way to gain an insight into the manner in which legends can arise.
Or could have been an abandoned child and left to her own devices by the parents from one of those villages with African roots.
I'm not an expert on DNA. In fact, I know next to nothing about DNA, so my puzzlement may be misplaced. But it seems to me that if Zana was an example of a relict hominid with such drastic morphological differences compared to modern humans, would that not have been obvious in the DNA that Sykes has already analyzed?
The loophole there is the fact that Sykes tested mtDNA and not NuDNA, I think.
If what you are suggesting is that nuDNA would show up species differences more than mtDNA would, then I think you are wrong. mtDNA mutates at a faster and more predictable rate than nuDNA, and so it is likely that if this is indeed an ancient migration our of Africa, predating the known migrations, then the mtDNA would show greater changes than the nuDNA. Rather than masking such changes, I am fairly sure that mtDNA would actually be the best place to be looking for them.
The addition of "that the footers believe" changes the sense of almost anything that is ever posted on the subject.
“Bryan noticed some unusual features on Khwit’s skull,” Mark Evans narrates, “very wide eye sockets and an elevated brow ridge that could suggest ancient, as opposed to modern, human origins. And he was starting to toy with a thought-provoking alternative notion.”
Sykes then shares it: “Maybe she isn’t an African of recent origin at all but one from a migration out of Africa many thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of years ago, and she comes from a relict population.”
Now, let us take the full measure of this “speculation.” If true, it would mean nothing less than that Zana was a member of a pre-modern human group mistakenly thought to be extinct—precisely what many researchers have long pointed to as the origin story of Sasquatch itself (those researchers, anyway, who don’t place this creature in the “ape” category). Keep in mind, too, that Professor Sykes has the mtDNA results from Khwit’s tooth (a scientific paper on the topic is awaiting publication) and therefore already knows the answer to whether Zana hails from a modern or an ancient period of time.
Bryan Sykes is an extremely prudent man—a conservative, world-class scientific mind. Thus, he would not have allowed himself to speculate, on international television, that Zana may have derived from a relict line of ancient Homo sapiens if the mtDNA sequences did not support this very conclusion. (It’s a conclusion, incidentally, that falls right in line with Melba Ketchum’s mtDNA findings.) If his test results had demonstrated a modern origin for Zana, it would be highly irresponsible and out of character for him even to entertain such a radically divergent hypothesis.
And finally, if Zana was merely a modern person and not, in fact, a Sasquatch (or Alma, in the Russian context), then why was she (as described) a dead ringer for the figure in the Patterson-Gimlin Film—more than a century before anyone had laid eyes upon Patty?
Buuuurrrnnnn her!!!!!Zana looked like a yeti/bigfoot.
Bigfoot/yeti is a bear.
Zana was a bear!
oops, wrong comedy.I said that footers would use the results, but I really didn't expect this:
http://www.cryptomundo.com/bigfoot-report/bryan-sykes-sasquatch-research/“Bryan noticed some unusual features on Khwit’s skull,” Mark Evans narrates, “very wide eye sockets and an elevated brow ridge that could suggest ancient, as opposed to modern, human origins. And he was starting to toy with a thought-provoking alternative notion.”
Sykes then shares it: “Maybe she isn’t an African of recent origin at all but one from a migration out of Africa many thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of years ago, and she comes from a relict population.”
Now, let us take the full measure of this “speculation.” If true, it would mean nothing less than that Zana was a member of a pre-modern human group mistakenly thought to be extinct—precisely what many researchers have long pointed to as the origin story of Sasquatch itself (those researchers, anyway, who don’t place this creature in the “ape” category). Keep in mind, too, that Professor Sykes has the mtDNA results from Khwit’s tooth (a scientific paper on the topic is awaiting publication) and therefore already knows the answer to whether Zana hails from a modern or an ancient period of time.
Bryan Sykes is an extremely prudent man—a conservative, world-class scientific mind. Thus, he would not have allowed himself to speculate, on international television, that Zana may have derived from a relict line of ancient Homo sapiens if the mtDNA sequences did not support this very conclusion. (It’s a conclusion, incidentally, that falls right in line with Melba Ketchum’s mtDNA findings.) If his test results had demonstrated a modern origin for Zana, it would be highly irresponsible and out of character for him even to entertain such a radically divergent hypothesis.
And finally, if Zana was merely a modern person and not, in fact, a Sasquatch (or Alma, in the Russian context), then why was she (as described) a dead ringer for the figure in the Patterson-Gimlin Film—more than a century before anyone had laid eyes upon Patty?
[/I]Its also darned similar to Sagan's "Venusian Dinosaur Fallacy", which goes something like this...
"I can't see a thing on the surface of Venus.
Why not?
Because it's covered with a dense layer of clouds.
Well, what are clouds made of?
Water, of course.
Therefore, Venus must have an awful lot of water on it.
Therefore, the surface must be wet.
Well, if the surface is wet, it's probably a swamp.
If there's a swamp, there's ferns.
If there's ferns, maybe there's even dinosaurs."
Observation? I can't see a thing!
Conclusion? Dinosaurs!