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Field Guide To Bigfoot, Yeti, & Other Mystery Primates Worldwide

Field Guide To Bigfoot, Yeti, & Other Mystery Primates Worldwide
By Loren Coleman, Patrick Huyghe, Harry Trumbore (illustrator)

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Product Description

Explore the New Frontiers of Nature

Neo-Giants, hairy, upright creatures-the classic Sasquatch-spotted and filmed by two men in Six Rivers National Forest, California...

True Giants, like the "nyalmo" of the Himalayas, the cannibals of folklore, often fifteen feet tall, leave startling two foot long, four-toed tracks in the mud and snow...

Merbeings, known as "chupacabras," spiny-backed primates frequently blamed for the mutilation of sheep, goats, and other animals, sighted last year in Puerto Rico, the United States and Brazil...

Thousands of reports of a wide variety of mysterious primates have intrigued humans since the beginning of recorded history, yet these shy and reclusive beings have eluded the most diligent attempts to verify their existence. Here is the first-ever comprehensive study on an astonishing variety of puzzling apelike and humanlike animals that are still being seen today. This fully referenced volume includes range maps and typical footprints for each type of undiscovered creature sighted around the world, as well as:Actual eyewitness accounts of sightingsDetailed IllustrationsNewest findings in an exciting branch of cryptozoologyLikeliest locales and most common subtypes for sightingAdvice on what to do if a sighting occursAnd much more!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #694121 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-04-01
  • Released on: 1999-03-09
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Loren Coleman has conducted fieldwork and bibliographical research on unknown hominids and mystery primates for nearly forty years. Trained in anthropology, zoology, and psychiatric social work, he is a professor at two New England universities and the author of a dozen books, including Tom Slick and the Search for the Yeti and Mysterious America.


Customer Reviews

overambitious and weak2
Please don't listen to people who think this book is a "must-have" or an "instant-classic", or another "(the author) has done it again!" book. This book is really rather weak book that should be considered more as entertainment than as a serious work.

1. "Mermen?" "Neo Giants"? Does anyone really think these things exist? And if they do, does anyone really think these things really exist based on a handful of weak reports?

2. The taxonomic classification system, while based in real science, is really a shot in the dark. While one might argue that Grover Krantz's beloved Gigantopithecus Blacki has been classified by science based on a few tooth fragments, well, that's actual physical evidence, and despite the fact that I do believe in a physical aspect to the Bigfoot phenomenon, there is no hard physical evidence. I know it's an attempt, Loren, but still, it's grasping at straws to even suggest these are different species. We could be dealing with a single species and the reported difference in physical appearance could be akin to so-called "racial" differences in humans.

3. The sightings in the reports are really kind of bland and uninteresting. No photographs, no eyewitness drawings, no photographs of locations, nothing. Just one pencil drawing per page. It would have been more interesting to make it look like a field investigator's scrapbook.

4. The sighting reports are too short. In many Bigfoot books, the author/researcher may spend many pages on a single sighting, interviewing eyewitnesses, documenting evidence, revisiting the scene, etc. There's none of this here. Every entry looks the same and is pretty much the same length.

5. I'm really baffled to find myself listed in the Acknowledgements section. I really don't know what I did to assist in the production of this book. I didn't even know the authors were writing it.

It's a fair read, don't get me wrong, though I think that anyone who reads it ought to read it with an iceberg-sized grain of salt. Those well versed in Bigfoot should give it a pass, or take it on as a curio, a maker in the careers of Loren Coleman and Patrick Hughye. Coleman in particular has been getting away from theorizing and sticking to dishing reports, so it's all the more frustrating to see him go back to theorizing and producing such, well, quality rubbish. I think it would be a good starter book for children in the way Marian Place's books were, a category that currently remains unfilled. It's contraversial, but then again, most Bigfooters think that professional wrestling is contraversial.

It's an odd book, a field guide for a nonexistent field.

Looking for Mr. Goodlink1
This book looks like any other field guide you might pick up. It has drawings, maps, tracks, descriptions of the organisms, and the details of the most prominent sightings or evidence. Coleman and Huyghe spend a considerable amount of time explaining the evolutionary pathways that could have led to the radiation of these "mystery primates". They even construct a sort of taxonomy that revises the Hominidae into 9 tribes that each contain several genera - with the "mystery primates" among them and linked to specific ancestral lineages in the fossil record.

This is not an anti-evolutionary book, but the use of evolutionary theory and evolutionary ecology to support the book's thesis is decidedly non-mainstream. The most significant error is the authors' confusion of the "single species hypothesis" - the model that proposes that modern humans emerged from a single, geographically-localized pre-sapiens population - with the competitive exclusion principle - the concept that competition between species using the same resources in the same way in the same environment will result in either extinction or new adaptation among the competitors. Furthermore, modern paleoanthropologists generally do not regard any particular fossil specimen as the ancestor of any other particular specimen. However, Coleman and Huyghe seem quite comfortable making direct links between, for example, Paranthropus and "Neo-Giants", such as Sasquatch, or between Gigantopithecus and "True Giants", such as gilyuk, orang dalam, misabe, or chenoo.

On the other hand, this is not a scientific book. True to the long tradition of pseudoscientific "research", the authors seem to accept almost any claim as "evidence". They provide detailed descriptions and drawings of organisms whose characteristics are constructed from traces presumed to be tracks or footprints. Often the descriptions and classifications are based on "eyewitness" accounts. The authors' chief rationale for accepting this "evidence" at face value is summarized near the end of the book.

"Could there be other primates as yet undiscovered by science roaming the world's wilderness areas? Absolutely. Throughout the twentieth century new primates continues to turn up at an astounding pace. Everything from large monkeys to small prosimians are being discovered." (p 172)

Indeed. There is one important difference, however. These newly-discovered primate species were found only recently because scientists began looking for them only recently - in systematic and intense surveys meant to characterize the entire ecological community in which they lived. With the possible exception of the mountain gorilla, their discovery is not the vindication of indigenous accounts of strange, mysterious creatures roaming the wilderness. In contrast, systematic scientific surveys have failed to confirm the existence of any of these other "mystery primates."

Coleman and Huyghe do admit that the lack of concrete evidence is a serious problem for their conclusions, and they lament the fact that to "prove" that they are correct about these creatures, someone will undoubtedly have to produce a carcass - or at least, they say, quoting Anthropologist Grover Krantz, you will have to "cut off the biggest piece you can carry and then go for help to retrieve the remainder" (p 178). Of course, that would help to identify the taxonomic status of the organism. But if the experience of the infamous Japanese "plesiosaur" is any indication, any scientific study that refutes the claim of a "mystery primate" would be vigorously and persistently discounted.

The authors provide 8 pages of "case sources" - reports of "mystery primates" - and 8 pages of resources organized by region. There are also 8 pages of bibliographic references, many devoted to the discovery of "new" primate species. However, the only reports in peer-reviewed scientific literature on the so-called "mystery primates" in this field guide are those that find that there is no conclusive evidence for the existence of such organisms. The same is true for this book - it has no scientific value as a field guide.

On the other hand, anyone interested in folk zoology - especially anyone interested in how legends and animal lore intersect with modern scientific research - would find this to be an intriguing volume. At the very least, it is an extensive, if uncritical, catalog of all the variations on the "mystery primate" theme organized geographically and annotated extensively. My copy is on the shelf next to White's (1984) Book of Beasts, and Merian's (1998) 1300 Real and Fanciful Animals....

Adapted from a review in _Reports of the National Center for Science Education_ 2000 May/Jun; 20(3).

A revised classification system for unknown primates4
Loren Coleman and Patrick Huyghe have in the course of 207 pages laid a basis for a reclassification system to the myriad of mystery primates from around the worldwide. Borrowing from the works of Mark Hall and Ivan Sanderson (to name a few) the proposed classification system encompasses nine (9) varieties of these cryptic creatures.

Coupled with the classifications, are 50 case studies each accompanied by an line illustration by Harry Trumbore. These case studies are short recounting of famous and not so famous, incidents and anecdotal information about each of these cases. The cases themselves are subgroup in a worldwide geographical breakdown, thus allowing a reader to view only the particular world area if they choose. Although some may question the inclusion of chupacabras or Steller's sea monkey (or ape) in the classification system, they do add some spice to the reading and perhaps offer a few un-thought of ideas.

The heart of the book though is not the case studies, rather the rationale for a reclassification to avoid the common term of "Bigfoot" around the world, as these mystery primates have been being reported long before the usage of the word "Bigfoot" in the mid-part of this century. The first portion of the book breaks down the various groups that make up the classification, these being: Neo-Giant, True Giant, Marked Hominid, Neandertaloid, Erectus Hominid, Proto-Pygmy, Unknown Pongid, Giant Monkey, and Merbeings. By far the last class, Merbeings, is the most controversial.

Additionally the latter part of the book deals with best bets as to which of these mystery creatures may be discovered first. It must also be said that some of the inclusions are historical and that the creatures described may no longer exist. The extensive bibliography, source pages and other resource and additional follows-up sections at the rear of the book, make it easier for a researcher to dig further for themselves.

The book does not answer everything, and there are some gray areas. But, as a medium to create debate and rethinking of ideas the book succeeds. As a book in a series of other Field Guides this one had to follow a certain pattern. More emphasis is needed on breaking down the exact anatomical variations between the classes and a more thorough emphasis on cases that make up those classes. But for limited space and a stricter pattern, the book does offer a reader the basics to start their own research and evaluation. Perhaps even offer the authors themselves a reclassification of their classifications.