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originally posted by: peter vlar
a reply to: kevinp2300
I'm only speculating but it's possible that the bipedalism was an adaptation related to traversing steep inclines/declines. They would have stood on their hind legs to reach possibly to make the climb easier. Like I said, pure speculation on my part as I don't know much about these guys. The human family tree is more my purview.
But a golden-brown sample from an animal shot by a hunter in the northern region of Ladakh, India, 40 years ago and a reddish-brown hair from a high-altitude bamboo forest in Bhutan both matched the presumed long-lost bear.
Prof Sykes admitted that the study has not yet come across a hidden human-like creature – the Holy Grail of cryptozoologists – but that the anomalous bear was the next best thing.
originally posted by: Silcone Synapse
a reply to: daaskapital
Man,I would love to think that there is a large species of ancient bear(or its modern day descendent)roaming the High Himalayas.Its certainly one of the few areas on earth an ancient animal could have remained hidden all these years.
But part of me thinks the hair sample could have been preserved in ice for centuries,and may belong to a long extinct species.Although its claimed that at least one sample was from a hunter who killed a beast only 40 years ago:
But a golden-brown sample from an animal shot by a hunter in the northern region of Ladakh, India, 40 years ago and a reddish-brown hair from a high-altitude bamboo forest in Bhutan both matched the presumed long-lost bear.
Prof Sykes admitted that the study has not yet come across a hidden human-like creature – the Holy Grail of cryptozoologists – but that the anomalous bear was the next best thing.
www.independent.co.uk...
Notice that word I put in Bold?
Ladakh...the only other time I have heard that location mentioned was years back-It was supposed to be the location of an alien UFO base I seem to remember...
Probably nothing,but as this is ATS-wouldn't it be cool if aliens were back engineering ancient DNA and bringing back extinct bears?
Mammoths next please aliens!!
originally posted by: peter vlar
a reply to: kevinp2300
I'm not convinced one way or the other. The ever curious inner child that made me want to study anthropology in the first place would very much like for them to be real. I think it's certainly a distinct possibility and it could be represented in the fossil record. Gigantopithecus Blacki lived as far back as one MYA, were the largest apes to have ever lived( just shy of 10 ft tall and as much as 1200 lbs) and geographically they were from the same areas where most yeti sightings occur, Nepal, China, India and Vietnam. The fossil record stop approx 100,000 yrs ago indicating it likely went extinct around then. However as we've seen with the coelacanth and a few others, just because we think a species died out at a certain time doesn't mean we are always correct and the geography and terrain are perfect places to exist with little outside contact so while I'm not certain I certainly am willing to entertain the notion if their existence.