Registered: 08/17/07
Posts: 20041
Loc: Outside the Matrix. Where RU?
....take 45 minutes and watch this National Geographic documentary.
The most recent PATTERSON FILM analysis is possibly the most compelling evidence available that there is a large Hominid inhabiting the pacific northwest.
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Populations suffer from a fear of change, for their conditioning assumes a static identity. Challenging ones belief system usually results in insult and aprehension. Being wrong is eroniously associated with failure, when in fact to be proven wrong should be celebrated, for it elevates us to a new level of understanding. There is no such thing as a smart Human being, for it is merely a matter of time before their ideas are updated, changed or eradicated. This tendency to hold on to a belief system, any belief system and sheltering it from new possibly transforming information, is nothing less than intellectual materialism. Dominant World views operate with the same social irrelevancy, they exist as barriers to social and individual growth. Major institutions exist as barriers to personal and social growth for each group perpetuates a closed world view.
Registered: 08/17/07
Posts: 20041
Loc: Outside the Matrix. Where RU?
One of the scientist in that documentary is Jeff Meldrum. His work along with Loren Coleman and others has really helped to further the research and bring an air of credibility into the research.
A little about the Dr. :
D. Jeffrey Meldrum, Ph.D., is currently an associate professor of anatomy and anthropology at Idaho State University and an affiliate curator of vertebrate palaeontology at the Idaho Museum of Natural History.
Through his work in the field of physical anthropology and his specialization in foot mechanics, Meldrum has studied the implications for bipedal adaptation and locomotion in early hominids. He has also participated in palaeontological field projects to South America, collecting new fossil primate specimens from the Miocene of Columbia and Argentina.
Meldrum is best known for his open-minded yet scientific approach to the bigfoot phenomenon. Because he grew up in the Pacific Northwest, Meldrum was no stranger to the subject, having heard sasquatch stories from an early age. His interest in the legendary creature took a back burner as he continued his formal education and teaching until 1996, when he found and cast a series of fresh sasquatch prints in Washington and, the following year, northern California. Meldrum has since gathered and purchased collections of purported track casts as part of his research into sasquatch foot anatomy, and his lab now houses what may be the world's most extensive collection of sasquatch track casts. Meldrum is widely considered the leading expert on sasquatch footprints as well as the derived morphology and functional anatomy of the foot.
Starting in the late 1990’s, Meldrum has frequently appeared, often with J. Richard Greenwell, in documentaries discussing his insights into amateur videotapes allegedly showing the creatures known as bigfoot and Yeti, in addition to sharing his research pertaining to derived foot anatomy and locomotion. He has spoken at many sasquatch conferences and symposia, including the Willow Creek International Bigfoot Symposium in 2003 and the "Bigfoot in Texas?" museum and speaker series sponsored by the University of Texas and the Institute of Texan Culture in 2006.
Since about 2001, Meldrum has received approximately $221,025 in grants, matching funds, and equipment donations in support of his on-going research initiative called the North American Ape Project (NAAP). The NAAP has been focused primarily on fieldwork in various regions of the Pacific and Inter-Mountain West.
Since about 2006, Meldrum has had a Virtual Specimen Library project in progress with the Idaho Virtualization Laboratory at Idaho State University. The project, called "Comparative Morphology of the Hominoid Foot" seeks, in part, to create and present virtual 3D images of his collection of purported sasquatch track casts in order to make them universally accessible for analysis.
Meldrum received his B.S. in zoology specializing in vertebrate locomotion at Brigham Young University in 1982, his M.S. at BYU in 1984 and a Ph.D. in anatomical sciences, with an emphasis in biological anthropology, from State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1989. He held the position of postdoctoral visiting assistant professor at Duke University Medical Center from 1989 to 1991. Meldrum worked at Northwestern University's Department of Cell, Molecular and Structural Biology for a short while in 1993 before joining the faculty of Idaho State University where he currently teaches.
_________________________
Populations suffer from a fear of change, for their conditioning assumes a static identity. Challenging ones belief system usually results in insult and aprehension. Being wrong is eroniously associated with failure, when in fact to be proven wrong should be celebrated, for it elevates us to a new level of understanding. There is no such thing as a smart Human being, for it is merely a matter of time before their ideas are updated, changed or eradicated. This tendency to hold on to a belief system, any belief system and sheltering it from new possibly transforming information, is nothing less than intellectual materialism. Dominant World views operate with the same social irrelevancy, they exist as barriers to social and individual growth. Major institutions exist as barriers to personal and social growth for each group perpetuates a closed world view.
"The liberty of any person to own a military style assault weapon and a high-capacity magazine and keep them in their home is second to the right of my son to his life." - David Wheeler, father of Newtown shooting victim.
"The liberty of any person to own a military style assault weapon and a high-capacity magazine and keep them in their home is second to the right of my son to his life." - David Wheeler, father of Newtown shooting victim.
"The liberty of any person to own a military style assault weapon and a high-capacity magazine and keep them in their home is second to the right of my son to his life." - David Wheeler, father of Newtown shooting victim.
Registered: 08/17/07
Posts: 20041
Loc: Outside the Matrix. Where RU?
Mountain Gorilla ! Coelacanth
_________________________
Populations suffer from a fear of change, for their conditioning assumes a static identity. Challenging ones belief system usually results in insult and aprehension. Being wrong is eroniously associated with failure, when in fact to be proven wrong should be celebrated, for it elevates us to a new level of understanding. There is no such thing as a smart Human being, for it is merely a matter of time before their ideas are updated, changed or eradicated. This tendency to hold on to a belief system, any belief system and sheltering it from new possibly transforming information, is nothing less than intellectual materialism. Dominant World views operate with the same social irrelevancy, they exist as barriers to social and individual growth. Major institutions exist as barriers to personal and social growth for each group perpetuates a closed world view.