Witness Sees The Montauk Monster
24.09.2008 09:47 UFO - Source: UFO Digest
by Angelina Fedorova
Posted: 14:00 August 29, 2008
Artist's impression of a Chupacabra Many mysteries of the previous century had been unraveled by the beginning of the current century. The Loch Ness Monster has been officially recognized dead, those who still believe in the existence of Big Foot and Chupacabra make the minority. The term cryptozoology, which Belgian zoologist Bernard Heuvelmans introduced at the end of the 1950s, becomes history slowly but surely.
Both common people and scientists used to be greatly interested in the existence of mysterious animals. A photograph or a video tape would always make headlines in many newspapers and provoke vivid discussions all over the globe.
In addition to widely recognized stars like giant apes and lake monsters, there also were sea lizards, giant squids, snake-birds and even dinosaurs.
The extensive list of cryptids the animals, which no one has ever spotted particularly includes the Jackalope a hybrid of an antelope and a rabbit, the Jersey Devil a winged creature with a long neck, as well as numerous analogues of the Loch Ness Monster the Mokele Mbembe reptile from Africa, the Champ and the Ogopoga (lake animals) from North America.
All these stories seem to be nothing more but modern fairy tales. However, there is a reason, which makes official science pay attention to cryptids. Serious biologists have made quite a number of real discoveries on the base of anecdotes and folklore of residents of various countries. The list of such successes includes the discovery of gorillas in 1847 (the mountain gorilla was discovered in 1902), the giant panda in 1869, the okapi (a short-necked type of giraffe) in 1901, the giant monitor lizard, or the Komodo Dragon in 1912, the bonobo (the Pygmy Chimpanzee) in 1929, the megamouth shark in 1976 and the giant gecko in 1984.
A live giant squid (Architeuthis) measuring roughly 25 feet (8 meters) long attacks a baited fishing line off the Ogasawara Islands. Japanese scientists recently released the first-ever images of a live giant squid in the wild. Their series of photos offers clues about the way giant squid swim and hunt in the deep ocean.
The capture of Latimeria, or Coelacanth - the oldest living lineage of gnathostomata known to date became an outstanding achievement of the kind in 1938. It was previously believed that the ancient fish had become extinct during the Cretaceous period.
Discoveries of previously unknown species of insects and bacteria are published in scientific magazines on a regular basis, although this does not seem to be that interesting to the general public.
A weird creature has recently been found on USAs Montauk coast. The dead animal resembled a dog or a coyote, but had a very strange beak. The beast was soon dubbed as the Montauk Monster. US biologists, who examined the body, stated that the creature was not known to science. Newsday quoted William Wise, the director of Stony Brook University's Living Marine Resources Institute, who also tried to comment the photograph.
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