Cryptozoology
Cryptozoology is the
study of animals that are rumored or suspected to exist, but for which conclusive proof is still missing; the term also includes the study of animals generally considered
extinct, but which are still occasionally reported. Those who study or search for such animals are called
cryptozoologists, while the
hypothetical creatures involved are referred to by some as "
cryptids", a term coined by John Wall in 1983.
Invention of the term cryptozoology (adding the
Greek prefix
kryptós, or "hidden" to
zoology to mean "the study of hidden animals") is often attributed to
zoologist Bernard Heuvelmans. However, Heuvelmans himself (in his book
In the Wake of Sea Serpents) attributes coinage of the term to the late
Scottish explorer and adventurer
Ivan T. Sanderson. Heuvelmans'
1955 book,
On The Track of Unknown Animals traces the scholarly origins of the discipline to
Anthonid Cornelis Oudemans and his 1892 study,
The Great Sea Serpent.
Loren Coleman, the modern popularizer of cryptozoology, has chronicled the history and personalities of the science in his books.
Another notable book was
Willy Ley's
Exotic Zoology (1959). Ley was best known for his books on
rocketry and related topics, but he also wrote a number of books about
animals.
Exotic Zoology (which combined some of Ley's older writings with new ones) is of some interest to cryptozoology, as he discusses the
Yeti and
sea serpents, as well as reports of
relict dinosaurs. The book's first section ("Myth?") entertains the possibility that some
legendary creatures (like the
sirrush, the
unicorn or the
cyclops) might be based on actual animals (or misinterpretation of animals and/or their remains).
Heuvelmans argued that cryptozoology should be undertaken with
scientific rigor, but also with an
open-minded,
interdisciplinary approach. He also stressed that attention should be given to local and folkloric sources regarding such creatures. While often layered in unlikely and fantastic elements, folktales may indeed contain grains of truth and important information regarding these animals.
Some cryptozoologists align themselves with a more scientifically rigorous field like
zoology, while others tend toward an
anthropological slant or even a
Fortean perspective. Cryptozoology is often considered a
pseudoscience by mainstream zoologists and biologists.
Scientists have demonstrated that some creatures of
mythology, legend or
local folklore were rooted in real animals or phenomena. Thus, cryptozoologists hold that people should be open to the possibility that many more such animals exist. In the early days of
western exploration of the world, many
native tales of unknown animals were initially dismissed as mythology or
superstition by western scientists, but were later proven to have a real basis in biological fact.
In the
New York Times, William J. Broad writes, "
Monster lovers take heart. Scientists argue that so much of the planet remains unexplored that new surprises are sure to show up; if not legendary beasts like the
Loch Ness monster or the
dinosaur-like
reptile "
Champ" said to inhabit
Lake Champlain, then animals that in their own way may be even stranger."[
1] Cryptozoologists point out that natives often know a great deal more about their immediate environment (and the animals that inhabit it) than western investigators, and therefore suggest that, even today, thus far unproven tales and traditions regarding unknown undescribed animals in native folklore should not be summarily dismissed in the same way.
There are several animals cited as examples for continuing cryptozoological efforts (none of which were actually discovered by cryptozoologists):
* The
Coelacanth, a "
living fossil" â€" a representative of an order of fish believed to have been extinct for 65 million years â€" was identified from a specimen found in a fishing net in 1938 off the coast of
South Africa. (The coelacanth was well known to
Comoros fishermen as the Gombessa, but unknown to scientists.)
* Of an even older lineage than the coelacanth are the
Graptolites. Living representatives were first found in 1882, although the group had previously been presumed to have been extinct for 300 million years. Cryptozoologists point these out to demonstrate that there are many unexplored regions of the world left, and that remote exotic locations or specialized
ecosystems relatively untouched by man may contain unexpected life.
* Similarly cited is the 1976 discovery of the previously unknown
megamouth shark, discovered off
Oahu,
Hawaii, when it became entangled in a ship's anchor. Some have cautioned against applying the "megamouth analogy" too broadly to hypothetical creatures, noting that while "the megamouth does show that the oceans have a lot of secrets left to reveal ... The Megamouth is not a useful analogy to support the existence of marine cryptids" in general. [
2]
* Also cited is the 2003 discovery of the remains of
Homo floresiensis, a descendent of
Homo erectus which took the anthropological community completely by surprise. Myths of a strikingly similar creature, called
Ebu Gogo by the local people, persisted until as late as the 19th century, but it took until 2003 before the possible fossil remains of this species were found.
* In 1930, a Danish research ship, the
Dana, collected a 6-foot
eel larva. A 3 inch larva (called a
leptocephalus) grows into a 6 foot eel. Scaling up, a 6 foot larva may result in a 100 foot adult.
* Cryptozoological supporters have noted that many unfamiliar animals, when first reported, were considered
hoaxes, delusions or misidentifications. The
Platypus,
Giant Squid,
Mountain Gorilla,
Grizzly-polar bear hybrid, and
Komodo Dragon are a few such creatures. Supporters note that unyielding
skepticism may in fact inhibit discovery of unknown animals. Others have suggested a rigid
world view disallows many
academics from accepting evidence contrary to the prevailing
paradigm.
* The emblem of the now-defunct International
Society for Cryptozoology is the
Okapi, a forest-dwelling relative of the
Giraffe that was unknown to Western scientists prior to 1901.
Georges Cuvier's so-called "Rash
Dictum" (a phrase coined by Heuvelmans) is sometimes cited as a reason that researchers should avoid unfounded, "rash" conclusions: in 1821, Cuvier remarked that it was unlikely for any large, unknown animal to be discovered, not because they aren't conspicuous, but because there aren't that many. Fewer than 50 such discoveries have been made since Cuvier's statement.
While many cryptozoologists strive for legitimacy and some are respected scientists in other fields, and though discoveries of previously unknown animals are often subject to great attention, cryptozoology
per se has never been fully embraced by the scientific community. A cryptozoologist may propose that an interest in reports of animals does not entail
belief, but a detractor might counter that accepting unsubstantiated sightings without
skepticism is itself a belief. As in other fields, cryptozoologists tend to be responsible for disproving their own objects of study. For example, some cryptozoologists have collected statistical data and studied witness accounts that challenge the validity of many
Bigfoot sightings.
It is the commitment to spectacular animals (mostly
vertebrates) that makes cryptozoology's critics suspicious of sensationalism. A source of suspicion could be that cryptids are usually creatures that should have been the
leastlikely to remain undetected and to leave no traces in the
fossil record, such as dinosaurs and
hominids. More probable cryptids like smaller vertebrates and
invertebrates are usually not reported as cryptids and seem to be of little interest to cryptozoologists.
Many mainstream experts are likely put off by the more sensationalistic fringe elements in cryptozoology, and the occasional overlap with alleged
paranormal phenomena. Another reason for the lukewarm reaction from mainstream science may be a lack of specialization. Unlike mainstream animal experts (who typically focus vary narrowly on a specific
species for their study), many cryptozoologists study or research a broad range of alleged creatures from many different families.
Most criticism—and sometimes ridicule—from the scientific mainstream is, however, directed at the proponents for the existence of the more "famous" cryptids (like
Bigfoot,
Yeti or the
Loch Ness Monster), whose existence is generally regarded as highly unlikely. Ben S. Roesch calls these alleged creatures "mega-monsters", and furthermore notes that "many lesser known mystery creatures" are alleged to exist as well, and that "some of these have more evidence going for them than the monster super-stars."[
3]
The larger cryptids, in fact, would not only have to often evade close contact (accidental or otherwise) with humans to remain undiscovered, they would also have to do so in great numbers. Such creatures could not survive unless there were a
gene pool composed of many—maybe hundreds—of the creatures. Many lake monsters are proposed to be
prehistoric reptiles that would live undetected in lakes despite the lakes being too cold for any known aquatic reptiles and with too little space and food to sustain a viable population of large animals. Aquatic animals with lungs like mammals and
plesiosaurs would also need to surface for air, making their ability to remain undetected in the view of skeptics like for example Bengt Sjögren (1980) very unlikely. There is also no evidence for any surviving prehistoric creatures in the fossil record. No unambiguous physical evidence (like a dead specimen) has ever been presented.
Supposedly credible eye-witness reports exist of
Bigfoot-like creatures in densely populated areas along the American east-coast, sightings of creatures such as
Mothman,
Spring-heeled Jack,
reptilian humanoids and of
ghosts, whose eyewitnesses might be just as honest and credible. A cryptozoologist must also address the sudden appearance and disappearance of sightings of the proposed animals, for example the
Loch Ness monster was not commonly reported until the 1930s. In the 19th century, a
Swedish folklorist collected trustworthy reports of sightings of
lindworms in
Småland, Sweden, but after a reward for a real animal was proclaimed, not only did any fail to find a lindworm, but the reports of existing such creatures rapidly decreased and disappeared entirely (Sjögren, 1980). The portrayal of the Loch Ness Monster's form appears to have changed radically between early sightings and the discovery of the plesiosaur.
Magicians
Penn & Teller criticized cryptozoology on an April
2006 episode of their television program
Bullshit!. [
4]
*
Cryptids*
Cryptid*
List of megafauna recently discovered*
Index of fictional species*
Legendary creature*
List of legendary creatures*
List of notable figures in cryptozoology*
Important publications in cryptozoology*
Monster*
Cryptic (zoology) - animals that are difficult to observe due to their behaviour or
camouflage*
Pseudoscience and
protoscience - due to some fields of study in cryptozoology
*
Xenobiology*
Bates College: Cryptozoology Out Of Time Place Scale*
British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club*
Strangeark*
American Monsters*
Centre for Fortean Zoology*
Cryptoworld News, Stories, Info, Links and Expedition Reports
*
Cryptozoolgical Realms General info on cryptzoology
*
CryptoMundo - Its a Cryptid World
*
Cryptozoology.com*
Cryptozoology links*
Enigma Cryptozoo, a website about cryptids*
GUST- Global Underwater Search Team (Swedish, English)*
Open Directory Project - Cryptozoology directory category
*
Cryptozoology Resources*
Pennsylvania Bigfoot Society*
Pibburns's Crytozoology links *
Swamp Creature.com*
The Cryptid Zoo*
The Cryptozoologist*
The International Society of Cryptozoology*
The Mothman*
The Shadowlands*
Cryptozoology forum at forteantimes.com*
Cryptozoology, Loch Ness & Nessie links*
Living Dinosaurs in Cryptozoology*Arment, Chad.
Cryptozoology: Science & Speculation. Landisville, Penn.: Coachwhip, 2004.
*Arment, Chad, ed.
Cryptozoology and the Investigation of Lesser-Known Mystery Animals. Landisville, Penn.: Coachwhip, 2006.
*Bille, Matthew.
Rumors of Existence. Surrey, B.C.: Hancock, 1995.
*Clark, Jerome.
Unexplained! 347 Strange Sightings, Incredible Occurrences, and Puzzling Physical Phenomena. Detroit: Visible Ink Press, 1993.
*
Coghlan, Ronan.
Cryptosup. Bangor: Xiphos, 2005.
*Coghlan, Ronan.
Dictionary of Cryptozoology. Bangor: Xiphos, 2004.
*
Coleman, Loren and Clark, Jerome.
Cryptozoology A to Z: The Encyclopedia of Loch Monsters, Sasquatch, Chupacabras, and Other Authentic Mysteries of Nature. New York: Fireside/Simon and Schuster, 1999.
*Coleman, Loren.
Tom Slick: True Life Encounters in Cryptozoology. Fresno, California: Craven Street Books/Linden Press, 2002.
*Eberhart, George M.
Mysterious Creatures: A Guide to Cryptozoology. 2 vols. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2002.
*
Heuvelmans, Bernard.
On The Track Of Unknown Animals. New York: Hill and Wang, 1959.
*Heuvelmans, Bernard.
In the Wake of the Sea-Serpents. New York: Hill and Wang, 1968.
*Newton, Michael.
Encyclopedia of Cryptozoology: A Global Guide to Hidden Animals and Their Pursuers. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2005.
*
Shuker, Karl.
In Search of Prehistoric Survivors. London: Blandford, 1995.
*Karl Shuker.
From Flying Toads To Snakes With Wings. St. Paul, Minnesota: Llewellyn, 1997.
*Karl Shuker.
The Beasts That Hide From Man: Seeking the World's Last Undiscovered Animals. New York: Paraview Press, 2003.
* Sjögren, Bengt,
Berömda vidunder, Settern, 1980, ISBN 9175860236
*Weidensaul, Scott.
The Ghost with Trembling Wings: Science, Wishful Thinking, and the Search for Lost Species. New York: North Point Press, 2002.