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In the 1980s, Dr Mackal led two expedition teams to the vast Likouala swamp and rainforest area of the Congo which is inhabited by pygmies, on the hunt for this mystery creature - Africa's version of Scotland's Loch Ness Monster.
The Mokele-mbembe is reputed to be a large reptile-like creature, with a long neck, and long tail.
Despite being a herbivore, it is said to roar aggressively if approached by humans. Some say it has a single horn, which it uses to kill elephants.
"Certainly mythology surrounds it," says Adam Davies, a British man who spends his spare time and money travelling the world in search of undocumented species, and has twice gone to Africa on the trail of the Mokele-mbembe.
"But when you put it to people, 'Is this a real creature?' they become quite affronted… and they consistently came out with physical descriptions."
In all, there have been more than two dozen searches for the "living dinosaur" over the years and still evidence for mokele-mbembe remains elusive. There are no photographs or films of the creature, no bones or teeth, no evidence beyond stories and anecdote. In the modern world of Google Earth, and ubiquitous cameras and cell phones, it is highly unlikely that dozens or hundreds of dinosaurs (there can't be just one that's 65 million years old!) exist but have somehow never been photographed or even found dead.
originally posted by: Thecakeisalie
Good day to all you loch ness lurkers, champ chasers, and Ogopogo ogglers, today i'm going to bring you a story of a river monster that only few folk would know, but it's an interesting tale indeed.
So in the congo, something is reported to be lurking in the gambia river (it flows into the congo) and there the locals re ported to seen what appeared to be an aquatic anomaly of some sort. Now evidence is hazy at best, but the earliest reports something amiss in the waters.
In the 1980s, Dr Mackal led two expedition teams to the vast Likouala swamp and rainforest area of the Congo which is inhabited by pygmies, on the hunt for this mystery creature - Africa's version of Scotland's Loch Ness Monster.
The Mokele-mbembe is reputed to be a large reptile-like creature, with a long neck, and long tail.
Despite being a herbivore, it is said to roar aggressively if approached by humans. Some say it has a single horn, which it uses to kill elephants.
now that is the testimony of the locals, whom Dr Roy Mackal who communicated through pictues as things could be lost in translation, pictures of local animals were immediately identified, the foreign animals weren't however when shown a picture of a dinosaur and without doubt or hesitation said "Mokole mbembe."
Now that's intersting, firstly if the reaction was immediate, there could be some credence to the stories, as Adam davies says
"Certainly mythology surrounds it," says Adam Davies, a British man who spends his spare time and money travelling the world in search of undocumented species, and has twice gone to Africa on the trail of the Mokele-mbembe.
"But when you put it to people, 'Is this a real creature?' they become quite affronted… and they consistently came out with physical descriptions."
So now we all have seen greys-the little big eyed chaps-so I can say i have seen one because X-Files. maybe it is just a campfire story
In all, there have been more than two dozen searches for the "living dinosaur" over the years and still evidence for mokele-mbembe remains elusive. There are no photographs or films of the creature, no bones or teeth, no evidence beyond stories and anecdote. In the modern world of Google Earth, and ubiquitous cameras and cell phones, it is highly unlikely that dozens or hundreds of dinosaurs (there can't be just one that's 65 million years old!) exist but have somehow never been photographed or even found dead.
Good point there, but now we come to the chicken and the egg. did the mythology came from actual reports, or did the mythology spawn the reports? your guess is as good as mine, however there are pink dolphins in the amazon river, the coelcamph was thought to be extinct for millions of years, what else could be lurking in our waters (or their waters)
I'm no cryptozoologist so i have no idea what to make of this.
originally posted by: Baddogma
a reply to: cooperton
I used to write off such arguments as the small minded rantings of religious fundamentalists, buuut there are those (fanciful??) pictographs you posted, and few sculptures and such, but the big one was the fresh tissue found on some dinosaur "fossils" and now... I'm just confused.
But the M-M legend in the Congo sure as heck has some legs to it and as such critters existed at some point in the past, why not a few now?
originally posted by: peter vlar
it's a misconception that there was fresh tissue found in dinosaur bones. There was fossilized soft tissue inside of a T-Rex fossil.
If Dinosaurs survived the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event, we would be finding even more fossils of increasingly younger ages than the estimated 66MA event that wiped out a large chunk of life on earth.
originally posted by: IAMTAT
a reply to: Gravelbone
I remember the stories too.
Apparently, one time the natives in the area killed and ate one...and discovered the meat was poisonous.
originally posted by: NoCorruptionAllowed
originally posted by: IAMTAT
a reply to: Gravelbone
I remember the stories too.
Apparently, one time the natives in the area killed and ate one...and discovered the meat was poisonous.
That is actually a very very interesting thing if the meat was poisonous, like a natural genetic defense mechanism for a herbivore dinosaur to be avoided by carnivores so it can survive. Poisonous toads, that sort of thing.