Some
core information here in this recent post put together by Dale Drinnon. First we get an excellent map of
Beringia. As noted, the migration of Gigantpithecus
and other prospective primate species had to be along this corridor, while that
same corridor held of humanity until technology allowed passage. Secondly we have an excellent chart of Ice
Age highs and lows over one million years.
This allows for a couple of
important conjectures.
The easy one is that the lowering
of the seal level opened up passage for migration over the Alaskan archipelago
itself through snow choked but low passes.
This avoids any attempt to transit the Ice Sheet or locate a mythical
passage out of Beringia. It would have
been difficult country, but within the capacity of a Sasquatch at least. This transit capacity had to be available for
the Ice Age Menagerie in any case as they exist on both sides and none could
hope to transit a two thousand mile wide ice sheet through high mountains. It is noteworthy that communication was
likely best when the Ice Age was at a
maximum. This certainly excluded those
not adapted.
The more difficult conjecture is
that the chart clearly marks a turning off of the Ice Age approximately every one
hundred years. This is consistent and it
is not random at all. The variation we
see fits easily inside natural error bounds and geologic variation. What the chart shows is an abrupt jump in
global heat content that is generally sustained for about half the time span or
around fifty thousand years. After that
it generally switches over to a cooling environment for the next fifty thousand
years. While there are ample drivers for
variation in this data set, the core story is that the cycle itself is correct
to a high level of probability.
This is an orbital story. We already know that the Solar system is orbiting
through the Sirius Cluster. This establishes
that the orbital period is around 100,000 years or slightly less, and that we
likely made the turn back to Sirius around ten to fifteen thousand years
ago. This coincided with other events
timed to take full advantage of this turn and the increase in heat.
We are thus around forty thousand
years away from reaching Sirius and turning back out. Thus for forty thousand years at least we
will continue to experience the benefits of the Holocene.
Now we come to the core of this
story. During the approach phase of our orbit, we are flying opposite to the
rotational movement of the Galaxy itself.
This naturally compresses the envelop surrounding the Solar system and induces
a much stronger magnetic interaction than is possible when traveling the other
direction. All this means that experiences
an increase in contained heat on a per unit basis. Thus the principle driver of the abrupt
ending of the Ice Age has been sudden passing of aphelion in our orbit around
Sirius.
This also coincides completely
with the cultural and rare archeological indicators regarding alien
intervention stepping in to accelerate our evolutionary progress from Cro Magnon
and the simultaneous disappearance of the Neanderthals and other coincidental
changes just at that particular time and place.
Real emergence appears at that time and has been a core date for this
blog. We would have made the turn
perhaps fifty thousand years ago with and extended period of interaction.
Astonishingly we have a solid
theoretical basis under the textual material popularized by Zachariah Sitchen
and others.
Bigfoot Evidence: possible Origin for Bigfoot
Saturday, October 6, 2012
A POSSIBLE ORIGIN OF SASQUATCH
SUNDAY, 7 OCTOBER 2012
Editor’s Note: This is a guest post by David Batdorf, a Sasquatch enthusiast that is interested in taking an anthropological, bird's-eye-view of the phenomenon and an advocate for species protection. Basically, he's a Bigfoot nerd.
In my last two posts, Sasquatch: Human vs Ape and The Ambiguous Gigantopithecus, I discussed my opinions, as to the likely origins of Sasquatch. I'd like to discuss the topic further utilizing what is known about protohuman migrations, periodic glaciation and the appearance of land bridges.
I will attempt to build a hypothetical model of the potential origin of the Sasquatch, identify which common ancestor we most likely share, offer suggestions for how they got to North America and when that migration could have occurred.
NOTE: I will focus on the
The difference between; "Ice Ages" and "Periods of Glaciation"
Most people refer to the most recent peak of extreme glaciation, as the last "Ice Age". The last glacial maximum or peak, in which, the first modern humans crossed the Bering land bridge, or Beringia, occurred 10,000 - 14,000 years ago. The Current Ice Age, also known as, Pleistocene Glaciation, Quaternary Glaciation or simply, "The Ice Age", has actually been underway for 2.58 million years. During this ice age, there have been several glacial periods and interglacial periods. Glacial peaks, known as a "glacial maximums", occur within glacial periods. Periods of glaciation, their peaks and interglacial periods are calculated by measuring the C02 levels in sediments and rocks, then inferring the amount of ice present and temperature changes.
Glaciers, being comprised of compacted snow, are usually formed on high mountains that collect precipitating clouds against their peaks. They slowly and powerfully flow like rivers to lower elevations, shaping the land as they go. It is this inland entrapment of water, that at times of extreme glaciation is over a mile thick, that leads to decreased sea levels and thus, the emergence of land bridges.
At our most recent glacial maximum, the Beringia land bridge was likely one thousand miles, from North to South, or roughly the distance from Seattle to San Francisco, spanned between Alaska and Siberia and not covered in ice, as many would imagine. It was a lush forest environment, much like the Alaskan and Canadian coastline and interior of today. To many of those who inhabited the region, Beringia would have been a seemingly endless, bountiful refuge as the glaciers encroached from the mountains on either side.
Narrowing the Timeline
I choose the development of bipedalism as a precursory point to
divergence of modern humans and Sasquatch. If this occurred 4.75 million years
ago and the period of Quaternary Glaciation began 2.58 million years ago, we
can cut the amount of time we need to look at for the Sasquatch crossing to America
nearly, in half.
Glacial maximums and the extremes to which glaciation occurred have been measured, dated and named, within the last Ice Age. The periods of glaciation, from the most recent to oldest with glacial peaks extreme enough to open the land bridge are: Wisconsin or Wurm; Illinois or Riss; Kansasian or Mindel; and Nebraska or Guns. Prior to
Within each these named periods are multiple glacial peaks or maximums. The third peak of the Wisconsin period is where modern people from Siberia came to
NOTE: Pleistocene Mammalian Gigantism has long been a theory of why Sasquatch is so large. In my hypothetical model, if Sasquatch shares common ancestry with us at an overall maximum of 4.75 million years ago and a first potential crossing at 1 million years ago, this gives Sasquatch 3.75 million years of evolution to adapt to a life in the Northern coniferous forest. More than enough time to do so, if only a fraction of that time. Many of those years could have been spent reacting to pressures of other mammals becoming giants and may have followed suit as a predatory or a defense mechanism. [this is a perfectly acceptable model for Gigantopithecus which fails to apply to the other candidates. Gigantopithecus has been around that long but the others haven't-DD]
Sasquatch, Out of
One reason that the Sasquatch' progenitors may have been on the move is due to the Miocene to Pliocene shift that occurred 5.3 million years ago, which began the deforestation and drying out of
There is much evidence that the exodus from
.....David Batdorf
Dale Drinnon Comments:
The author of this article pegs Homo erectus as the most likely candidate for Bigfoot and other "Abominable Snowmen" casres. This is a popular theory and has indeed been a popular theory all along. However there is one problem that this does not address: there is often a difficult line to draw in classification between H. erectus and H. heidelbergensis. ALL of the LATER "H. erectus" fossils might conceivably be H. heidelbergensis instead (that's right, including Pekin Man: Solo man is a probable heidelbergensis and Pekin Man is very similar to the Solo fossils-BOTH sets are much later than H. heidelbergensis had taken over other parts of the Earth, and BOTH are much different than the earlier "Java man." And of course the same exact reasons for excluding Neanderthals and Heidelbergers as candidates could be applied with equal force to exclude erectus as a candidate as well. Homo erectus looks best as an AVERAGE candidate that covers all of the others because you can take more advanced, more manlike reports and average them out with less advanced, less manlike reports to have an overall model that resemvbles erectus, theoretically fit to cover both extremes. However my reading of the evidence is that we do not have an easy situation with a variable median type, we actually do have a situation with highly polarized extremes of more apelike and more humanlike types boion and frustratingly all called by the same names.
And so while the author of this article does have his points, My own reading of the evidence is that his points have not carried the argument and have not shown any decisive advantage for accepting this alternative theory. Furthermore, when the theorist insists on saying we are looking for an erectus type, that immediately invalidates all of the fossil and subfossil finds which agree more with the Heidelberger and Neanderthal types, which consists of quite a few individual specimens over a very large span of time and over large sections of the world, specimens ranging anywhere from Postglacial generally up to very recent indeed. One more example of an "Early man" type skull of geologically recent date from
Best Wishes, Dale D.
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