Not so fast on not so fast.
We have one hundred DNA samples that have been I assume properly
analyzed by a lab in the business and a number of check tests done
with other laboratories. We have results that support two
conjectures.
The results are that the DNA has a recent human component in
conjunction with an ancient unknown hominid lineage. We certainly
can tell that much and there are enough samples to draw likely
conclusions.
1 The human component may well represent contamination although that
gets less likely as we increase our sample size. I am sure most
samples arrived in a zip lock bag and most of the samplers were very
careful but not trained.
2 It is a legitimate hybrid unique to the Americas and plausibly of
an Asian wild man. Regardless, the DNA itself is shaking out as an
unknown hominid of some sort.
The paper is now available for open review and outright replication.
That means children that it is time for our ignorant naysayers to
either shut up or to pony up money and replicate these results with
superior methodology.
We are on the verge of actually confirming and even interacting with
this creature for the sake of a decent trackers budget other well
established methods now available.
Bigfoot DNA
Discovered? Not So Fast
By Benjamin
Radford,
In November of last
year, a Texas veterinarian made national news claiming that genetic
testing confirmed that not only is the legendary Bigfoot real, but is
in fact a human relative that arose some 15,000 years ago.
The study, by Melba S.
Ketchum, suggested such cryptids had sex with modern human females
that resulted in hairy hominin hybrids: "Our data indicate that
the North American Sasquatch is a hybrid species, the
result of males of an unknown hominin species crossing with female
Homo sapiens," Ketchum said in a statement. The scientific
community was rightly skeptical, partly because Ketchum's research —
which spanned five years — had not appeared in any peer-reviewed
scientific journal.
Now the study has
finally been published, kind of, and it raises more questions than
answers. The piece, written by a team of researchers led by Ketchum,
is titled "Novel North American Hominins: Next Generation
Sequencing of Three Whole Genomes and Associated Studies" and
published in the "DeNovo Scientific Journal."
The study, which used
1,100 samples of alleged Bigfoot hair, blood, mucus,
toenail, bark scrapings, saliva and skin with hair and subcutaneous
tissues attached, were collected by dozens of people from 34 sites
around North America. Hairs were compared to reference samples from
common animals including human, dog, cow, horse, deer, elk, moose,
fox, bear, coyote, and wolf, and were said not to match any of them.
[Rumor or Reality: The Creatures of Cryptozoology]
The report concluded,
"we have extracted, analyzed and sequenced DNA from over one
hundred separate samples... obtained from scores of collection sites
throughout North America. Hair morphology was not consistent with
human or any known wildlife hairs. DNA analysis showed two
distinctly different types of results; the mitochondrial DNAcm
was unambiguously human, while the nuclear DNA was shown to harbor
novel structure and sequence... the data conclusively proves that the
Sasquatch exist as an extant hominin and are a direct maternal
descendent of modern humans."
DNA Sampling
So what can we make of
this? The most likely interpretation is that the samples were
contaminated. Whatever the sample originally was — Bigfoot, bear,
human or something else — it's possible that the people who
collected and handled the specimens (mostly Bigfoot buffs with little
or no forensic evidence-gathering training) accidentally introduced
their DNA into the sample, which can easily occur with something as
innocent as a spit, sneeze or cough.
Though the study
claims that "throughout this project exhaustive precautions were
taken to minimize or eliminate contamination" in the laboratory,
the likelihood that the samples were contaminated in the field by
careless collection methods, normal environmental degradation, and
other factors was not addressed. In some cases the person(s)
submitting the alleged Bigfoot sample also contributed a sample of
their own DNA to help rule out contamination, but the possibility of
DNA contamination by others (such as hunters or hikers) could not be
ruled out.
How did the team
definitively determine that the samples were from Bigfoot? Well, they
didn't; the report details where Bigfoot samples were retrieved:
"hair found on tree" and "hair found on wire fence"
are typical. In other words, the people collecting the samples didn't
see what animal left it there, possibly weeks or months earlier—but
if it seemed suspicious it might be Bigfoot. [Beasts & Monsters:
Scientific Journal?
Ketchum's study had
been rejected by other scientific journals. So what about the journal
that finally published the study, "DeNovo Scientific Journal"?
The journal has no other studies, articles, papers or reviews.
Ketchum's is the only paper the journal has "published." No
libraries or universities subscribe to it, and the journal and its
website apparently did not exist three weeks ago. There's no
indication that the study was peer-reviewed by other
knowledgeable scientists to assure quality. It is not an existing,
known, or respected journal in any sense of the word.
This raises some red
flags: If the results of the Ketchum et al. study are so valid and
airtight, why didn't they appear in a respected, peer-reviewed
scientific journal? Surely any reputable journal would fight Bigfoot
tooth and Sasquatch nail to be the first to publish groundbreaking
valid evidence of the existence of an unknown bipedal animal.
In fact, researchers
from Oxford University and the Lausanne Museum of Zoology announced
last year that they would test any supposed Sasquatch
samples that believers volunteered to send.
"I'm challenging
and inviting the cryptozoologists to come up with the evidence
instead of complaining that science is rejecting what they have to
say," geneticist Bryan Sykes of the University of Oxford told
LiveScience in May 2012.
In an interview on the
MonsterTalk podcast, Dr. Todd Disotell of the New York University
Molecular Anthropology Laboratory dismissed the idea that Bigfoot
could be a primate that arose as recently as Ketchum's DNA results
claim: "If it's a primate that is so similar to us, that's only
separated from us about 15,000 years ago, that's us," he said.
"Even with people of European extraction, we've got 50,000 years
of common ancestry since we left Africa." In other
words, there is far more than 15,000 years of genetic diversity among
ordinary humans, so the idea that something that split from our
lineage would be as different from us as Bigfoot is absurd.
It seems that the
Ketchum Bigfoot DNA study, which was supposed to rock the world with
its iron-clad scientific evidence of Bigfoot, is a bust, and
tells us more about junk science than about the mysterious monster.
Scientists will not be impressed, but Bigfoot believers might be; the
report is available to the public for $30 from Ketchum's web site.
Benjamin Radford is
deputy editor of "Skeptical Inquirer" science magazine and
author of six books including Tracking the Chupacabra: The
Vampire Beast in Fact, Fiction, and Folklore. His Web site is
www.BenjaminRadford.com.
Copyright
2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.
1 comment:
Regardless of possible contamination from human DNA by careless collectors, there's still that DNA from an "unknown hominid" to consider. Let's set the human DNA aside for awhile and concentrate on that unknown hominid. What is it related to, and just what the h*ll is it?
--Leslie <;)))>< Fish
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