BIG "Bigfoot
information Group Inc."
Q and A about Bigfoot
1. Why do people believe Bigfoots exist? There have been well over 7000 reported sightings of a large hairy animal walking on 2 legs, too big to be a Gibbon, and there have been hundreds of footprints found that don't belong to any other known animal. There are some very good footprints with convincing pad prints similar to finger prints, that have the leading U.S. finger print expert of human and ape finger print data convinced there is a unique specie of ape-human. The casts made from these even show the gripping of the foot on the ground, something a molded fake foot can’t do. The footprints are often too deep into the soil to be faked, unless someone could carry over 500 pounds as they made them. Something is causing this, and "Bigfoot" is the name that many people in the United States use to describe it.
2. Why are there so few good photos? There are a lot of reports of cameras and other electronic devices being moved, broken, or damaged before a photo is taken. Scientist have discovered that platypuses use thousands of mechanoreceptors and electroreceptors in their bill skin to hunt prey in murky rivers and streams. They call it Electroreception. Studies of animals and cameras indicate that many animals can detect sound and/or infared light from game cameras. Pythons and vipers use the heat emanating from rodents to “see” them as an infrared image. It seems likely that Bigfoots have these abilities, as they often damage game cameras before the cameras photograph them. The vast majority of sightings are very brief - too quick to get a photo or video. Sometimes the sighting is so close by, that people chose to insure their personal safety over photography.
3. Why doesn't anyone have a dead body of one? Many people have reported an opportunity to shoot, but held back because what they were seeing was just too 'human' looking to shoot at. In a few cases people have shot, with guns as large as .30-06, only to see the animal walk off. Others have feared the retaliation of the animal if they didn't kill it, or retaliation from other members of the same animal that may be near by. Like elephants and some other animals, it is quite possible that they bury or at least cover-up thier deceased.
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4. Why aren't people shooting one with a tranquilizer dart? To do this safely and effectively, you would need a very close estimate of the animals weight, a good position to aim and shoot, and then there is a dangerous delay before the drug takes effect, that could endanger the animal, the shooter, or both.
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5. What do we know about Bigfoot? The information collected speculates a very intelligent creature, more than any other non-human, that is more like human than any other animal that we know of. The following is likely accurate: Adult bigfoots are considerably taller than humans by at least 1 to 4 feet , and they must weigh 4 to 5 times as much as humans to make the foot impressions that have been found. They have no claws, but finger nails, virtually no neck, able to run 40 mph or more, and able to jump 60 feet forward. They walk with one foot directly in front of the other and swing their arms while walking (try putting one foot directly in front of the other, and you will swing your arms too). Bigfoots are often seen walking with out completely straightening their legs, can throw rocks much heavier than the average adult can't pick up, are basically harmless as there is virtually no evidence of one purposely trying to hurt a human, and they eat a wide variety of plants and meats. They can see in almost total or maybe total darkness with eyes that seem to glow, swim very fast and like a frog, nocturnal, make a wide variety of sounds, and may imitate other animals. Sometimes they smell extremely bad, will break large tree branches that are higher up and larger than a human could reach or break, and stacks bones in a very neat pile after eating an animal. Their nose looks more human than ape, their ears are lined up with their eyes like a human's, arms are longer proportionately than humans, and recorded sounds indicate that they have a language and a wider vocal range than humans. (humans can't produce the sound ranges that are recorded, and some of the recordings indicate a language, according to multiple language experts) In the book "The Hoopa Project" an expert sketch artist made drawings based on discriptions of several eye witnesses. Even though the witnesses didn't know each other, the drawings look amazingly similar.