Science writer and author, Matt Bille (Shadows of Existence and Rumors of Existence) attended the inaugural International Cryptozoology Museum Conference in St. Augustine, Florida last week and reported on the proceedings. You can read his entire review of the 3-day event here but I’ll highlight some of the news and views that came out of the meeting.
The event was arranged and hosted Loren Coleman, the founder of ICM in Portland, Maine. Speakers included Bigfoot-hunter Cliff Barackman of TV’s Finding Bigfoot, biologist and Beast Hunters TV personality Patrick Spain, Canadian cryptozoologist Dr. Paul LeBlond, and author Lyle Blackburn who wrote readable, well-researched books for general audiences on the Beast of Boggy Creek and the Scape Ore (Bishopville) Lizardman.
Cryptozoologist of the Year award was bestowed upon film-maker, attorney, writer, and philanthropist Jeremy Efroymson, a supporter who exists in the background providing funding for cryptozoological projects. The Efroymson Family Fund have provided grants toward the Virtual Footprints Archive at Idaho State University, the Ohio Bigfoot Conference, and the International Cryptozoology Museum.
On the last day, Coleman opened with the announcement of the formation of the International Cryptozoology Society (ICS) to be headed by Dr. LeBlond as the President and an advisory panel. Details on the new society to be run by Coleman and another museum director are not yet available but the ICS is intended to be the long-hoped for resurrection of the principles of scientific study followed by the defunct International Society of Cryptozoology (ISC). The ISC met a messy end in 1998 that left existing and prospective members (such as myself) in the dark for years, hoping the society would come back, until it was clear that it was truly gone along with its remaining founder, Dr. Roy Mackal. It does not appear that remnants of the old ISC will be continued but this will be a fresh start.
The new ICS will include a journal and a conference. The first associated conference will be at Coleman’s museum in Maine in 2017. It’s not clear if this proposed journal is the same as the Museum journal that was projected for April 2015. That, as far as I know, has not yet materialized....