Sasquatch


 

 

 

 

Photos from the May 7-14th Alaska Mystery Cruise.

 

Sasquatch finger prints?

 


Author of Raincoast Sasquatch Robert Alley next to a sign that was knocked down two years ago with what appears to be fingerprints on the back. The force knocked the sign
down at the base at a 45 degree angle. It has been reset and a rope now holds it upright.

Right photo is Charlette LeFevre's left hand. Note the sign is behind the railing making it impossible for it to have been a car and
the size difference in finger width in what could be larger finger pads. Bottom small finger width is exactly one half inch in width, middle and ring finger nine sixteenth's inches wide.
No fingerprints or details are noticed
Also note the prints are not dirt or oil but take on the color of the underlying metal as it appears that something rough
took off the coating and corrosin and the darkness of the metal is showing through.


Skooki Project
Control Photo 5/12/05 Three apples, one orange

Broken tree top.


Richard scoping Harriet Lake


Museum Directors Philip Lipson and Charlette LeFevre at Ward Lake, Ketchikan, AK

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information at the Seattle Museum of the Mysteries on Sasquatch, reports posted with permission from Mysterious Sighting Report Form.

Reports


Photo by Bree and Ben (last name withheld), pen was placed to right of track for size indication.
Date of sighting: 5/10/05
Location: Snoqulamie Pass, Washington
Time: 6:12pm
Description: We found 3 footprints in a patch of snow about 20 mins up Gold Creek Rd.
Report taken: 6/30/05


 

 

Previous Exhibit and Speakers

 

 



Come see the evidence, film analysis and why despite contrary claims the evidence shows
we indeed have a Great North American Ape in our woods!

Collected and exhibited by author Chris Murphy with the generous support of
Journalist and researcher John Green, the exhibit is now the first showing in the U.S. of a comprehensive display of evidence and includes over a dozen bigfoot casts, hand casts, hair samples, model skulls and detailed frames of the famous 1967 Patterson- Gimlin film.
Previously on display at the Vancouver Museum this exhibit is now the first showing in the U.S. of a comprehensive display of evidence. Casts and charts and artwork are from various researchers such as John Green, Rick Noll, Tom Steenburg, Dr. John Bindernagel and artists Penny Birnam, Paul Smith and Rob Roy Menzies.


The exhibit includes:
The footprint casts include the Heryford cast, cast by Sheriff Denny Heryford
on April 22, 1982 in Grays Harbor County, Washington.
Skull comparison charts by Yvon Leclerc.
Head sculptures based on Patterson/Gimlin film by Penny Birnam, Skull models of a Gigantopithicus, gorilla and human skull. Gigantopithicus skull modeled by late Washington State Universityıs Physical Anthropologist Dr.Grover Krantz.
Hand and knuckle print casts by Paul Freeman found in Blue Mountain, WA and Elk Wallow, WA.
Hair samples of what could be a sasquatch with comparison hair samples of gorilla, chimpanzee and oragantang.
Native American drawings, legends, stories and statements.
Artwork by Paul Smith and Rob Roy Menzies
This is a must see for any student and Anthropology major.
Admission to the museum and gallery is $3 adult, free kids 15 and younger
Additional donations to support the museum and research gladly accempted.



Kewaunee Lapseritis, B.A., M.S.
Telepathic Communication: The Key to Unlocking the Sasquatch Mystery


Kewaunee has discussed his research finding which include just why no proof has been forthcoming after 50 years of searching by mainstream Bigfoot researchers, what these elusive man-creatures are telling witnesses and why science needs to revamp the empirical model to include anecdotal information.

Kewaunee Lapseritis, B.A., M.S. is a social scientist, world traveler and a Bigfoot/Sasquatch researcher for 49 years; he is a world authority on the subject. In 1973, Kewaunee conducted an Ethnographic study living among he Tukuna Indian of Upper Amazonia; this was in conjunction with the Colombian Institute of Anthropology in Bogota.
He has explored many areas of the world and was investigating the yeti in the Himalayas in 1968. Kewaunee discovered that the sasquatch are a nature people and can communicate via mental telepathy. He has documented 122 percipients who have had such experiences one with a Ph.D. His book ³The Psychic Sasquatch" has become popular offering a whole new perspective on this phenomenon. Kewaunee has been on over 270 radio and television talk shows as well as being featured twice on the Discovery Channel.


Young gorilla at the Woodland Park Zoo doing the "Skookum cast" lean
Photo on right shows young ape stepping on branches in checking out something on the ground.
The photo also demonstrates how agile apes are.



Sleeping ape and detail of hand

Young ape's foot.
("orbs" on right photo are likely reflected dust particles.)



Bronz cast of actual Orangutan hand and Matt Crowley's hand along with young visitors hand.
Note the large crease lines.

 

Details in bronze cast of Orangutan hand.

 

 




Print of Skookcum Cast on Display at the museum along with bigfoot casts.

The Seattle Museum of the Mysteries has recently acquired a large 40% scale full-color photograph of the famous Skookum cast for public display of what may be the first documented body imprint of a Sasquatch, commonly known as Bigfoot. The impression was discovered and cast by Richard Noll of the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization in September of 2000 near Mt. St. Helens along with Dr. LeRoy Fish - retired wildlife ecologist and Derek Randles on an expedition. News of the impression made international news. The impression has been displayed briefly at events but the museum is delighted to have the print as part of their permanent display for continual viewing.

Philip Lipson, Director of the museum states ³We are glad to highlight such an important well documented scientific find given the recent media attention of numerous people casting doubt on the possibility of bigfoot. There are so many sightings going back hundreds of years including Native American accounts that cannot be explained away². The actual Skookum cast housed by Richard Noll is too large and fragile to place in the museum and is protected under a locked box for future analysis but directors are excited that now students and those interested can now study upclose the details and impressions of what researchers have called the second best evidence of bigfoot since the Patterson-Gimlin film.

What makes the cast highly significant is that it shows several heel prints, dermal ridges, forearm, side, buttocks and hip impressions along with hair patterns. Independant researchers have noticed specificly arm and hip muscles and dermal ridges, comparable to fingerprints are only found on primates and humans.

The investigating team of the Skookum cast included Dr. Jeff Meldrum, professor of anatomy and anthropology at Idaho State University. The late Dr. Grover Krantz, retired physical anthropologist from Washington State University; Dr. John Bindernagel, Canadian wildlife biologist; John Green, retired Canadian journalist and author; and Dr. Ron Brown, exotic animal handler and health care administrator. The researchers who examined the cast all agreed that it cannot be attributed to any commonly known Northwest animal and may represent an unknown primate.

The Seattle Museum of The Mysteries also has for viewing a high resolution DVD of the full Patterson-Gimlin film and two donated bigfoot casts one from Walla Walla Washington.

Additional information on the Skookum cast can be found at www.BFRO.net

 



Richard Noll

Richard Noll of Edmonds Washington has been investigating the sasquatch phenomenon for over 30 years.
He is an experienced tracker and photographer, and one of the leading experts in the use of various casting materials,
particularly in the area of animal tracks. Rick was one of the three who identified the sasquatch impression in the mud,
and without him the impression could not have been successfully preserved.

On display at the museum, two bigfoot casts donated by Richard Noll
of Skookum Cast fame.
The Walla Walla Bigfoot Cast - the first cast studied by the late Washington State University Anthropologist
Grover Krantz found to have dermal ridges and the Laird Meadows cast found by Pat Graves near Bluff Creek,
California in 1964 cast by Roger Patterson of the famous Patterson-Gimlin film 1967.


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