This is
remarkable and unexpected news. It also
conforms to the scant reports of a snow loving and ultimately snow adapted
large mammal. Had we actually thought
about it for a moment, that was the real clue.
The only such large animal is the polar bear and it is completely
plausible for a relict population to survive in the natural refugia of the high
Himalayas.
Even better, he
was able to do the DNA and made an astounding hit with a 40,000 year old
jawbone. So now we know we are looking
for a population of mountain polar bears wandering around the snow and the high
country were we are not.
What made
Ketchum’s recent DNA work particularly compelling was that it opened the door
to a human – Asian Wildman hybrid arising just ten thousand years ago. It explained the DNA problem of apparent
human contamination while the bulk of the DNA remained unknown. These are testable and allows the rest of the
DNA beside the mDNA to be investigated more closely rather than be dismissed.
Cameras and DNA
testing will ultimately flush out all these relict populations and as we have
discovered, we have plenty to chase.
British scientist solves mystery of the Yeti: a hybrid
bear that may still live in the Himalayas
By Scott Sutherland | Geekquinox – Thu,
17 Oct, 2013
Does the mysterious Yeti
still roam the Himalayan Mountains? The mystery of the legendary Abominable
Snowman has finally been solved, but in a way that will likely disappoint most
Yeti hunters, as scientists have pulled the mask off this elusive creature to
show its true face.
According to
British geneticist Bryan Sykes, the Yeti is not an ape-like relative of Bigfoot,
as the legends of this creature would have us believe. Gathering DNA samples
from two regions of the Himalayan Mountains, Sykes has used sophisticated
genetic analysis techniques to compare them to the genetic codes of other
animals and samples that have been gathered over the years, and he came up with
an exact match. The match came from a jawbone discovered in Svalbard, Norway, that
belonged to a species polar bear that lived at least 40,000 years ago.
An apparent Yeti
footprint captured in 1951."This is an exciting and completely
unexpected result that gave us all a surprise," Sykes said, according to Huffington Post. "There's more work to be done on
interpreting the results."\
Somewhere
between 40,000 and 120,000 years ago is when the polar bear and
the brown
bear branched off from a common ancestor. However, the two species
remain so closely related that they can interbreed, and that's what Sykes
believes the Yeti is — a hybrid polar bear/brown bear — and there may be
specimens of this hybrid species still in the Himalayas today.
"I don't
think it means there are ancient polar bears wandering around the
Himalayas," he said in the interview, "but we can speculate on what the
possible explanation might be. It could mean there is a sub-species of brown
bear in the High Himalayas, descended from the bear that was the ancestor of
the polar bear. Or it could mean there has been more recent hybridization
between the brown bear and the descendant of the ancient polar bear."
This news
comes on the tail of recent reports that a team in the U.S. claims they've found Bigfoot, however
that 'research' seemed to rush to the desired conclusion regardless of what the
results actually showed. If there's one thing that science is, it's accepting
of any possibility that the universe can throw at us, as long as there's
credible and testable evidence. That's where the Bigfoot investigators fail. If
they were able to provide that kind of evidence, science would gladly embrace
the existence of these creatures. In fact, many scientists would love it if
Bigfoot and Yeti actually existed, even as they're described in the legends,
because it would be a remarkable and wondrous discovery.
As Professor
Sykes so aptly put it in his interview: "Bigfootologists and other
enthusiasts seem to think that they've been rejected by science. Science
doesn't accept or reject anything, all it does is examine the evidence and that
is what I'm doing."
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