Cryptozoology: The Pseudo-Science of Mythical Creatures
Defined by the academic community as a pseudoscience, cryptozoology’s main purpose is to find and prove the existence of animals talked about in legends, folklore and mythology like Bigfoot, chupacabras, the Loch Ness monster, ancient sea monsters and animals thought to be extinct and ignored by most biologists and zoologists. Serious cryptozoologists, generally self-financed or funded by private donations, aim to prove these hidden animals exist by collecting and studying evidence from locations of reported sightings.
Most academics look down on the study of mythical or hidden creatures, implying that it is not a true science. Zoology for example, involves the study of animal behavior, their physical bodies, their habitats, their distribution and their taxonomy. However, the idea behind cryptozoology is the same, except it involves looking for animals long hidden from the modern world.
7 comments:
Yeah, we're thick with Kokopelli's down here. Can't throw a rock without hitting one. The real trickster is the Coyote.
Also I have a story about La Llorona too. Midnight, stoned, in a big wash south of town.
Sure you do. We all THINK we have seen something but it was a bush that was rustling in the wind. Loup-Garou or Loupie Garou as we called it was big when I was a kid. Thought I saw one in a church cemetary and got his picture but it was a german shepherd in the graveyard with glowing eyes.
In the trickster deity chart, they missed Kitsune the fox deity from Japan. Love all those charts!
And they missed Coyote too from North American indigenous culture.
Those are two pretty big oversights especially Coyote, the trickster. Even Homer saw him on the Simpsons and he sounds like Johnny Cash.
That was a great episode!
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