ID | #1634821596 |
Added | Thu, 21/10/2021 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Hypothesis
|
Initial data
A strange creature resembling a snowman has frightened residents of the Canadian province of British Columbia. This is reported by the Canadian newspaper The Star.
On the evening of December 25, 2020, four friends driving a car along a highway near the city of Silverton noticed a huge figure on the side of the road. According to them, she resembled a very large man or a grizzly bear standing on its hind legs. The creature quickly dropped to four paws and disappeared into the thicket. Friends stopped the car, photographed his tracks and sent the pictures to cryptozoologists who are looking for snowmen.
"We found a wide variety of tracks, and some looked particularly disturbing. These were the tracks of a bipedal creature leading into the forest in a straight line. I was a little scared when I saw their size. And they were definitely not bear paws" - Erica Spin-d’Sauce is an eyewitness.
According to the head of the organization Bigfoot Field Research Group and the host of the program "In search of Bigfoot" on the Animal Planet channel Matt Moneymaker, a fake or a draw is excluded.
"The untouched snow surrounding the tracks proves that the tracks are not fabricated by people—" he explains. - The length of the step exceeds the capabilities of a person trying to move through snowdrifts up to the knee. Traces of dragging and depth show that they could not have been left by a jumping hare. The linear nature of the tracks indicates that it was not a bear."
Ten days after the observation, a group of cryptozoologists from Okanagan visited the scene. They studied the tracks and came to the conclusion that they could have been left by an elk.
"Eyewitnesses could see a large moose looking ahead and mistake it for a humanoid figure," says Moneymaker.
At the same time, he notes that moose tracks are not enough for a final conclusion.
Hypotheses
Famous creatures

There are a huge number of different living organisms on our planet. According to recent estimates, the number of species of organisms on our planet is approximately 7-10 million. However, only 15% of the data are described today.
According to the calculations of Canadians, 2.2 million species live in the world's oceans, 6.5 million on land. There are only about 7.8 million species of animals on the planet, 611 thousand fungi, and 300 thousand plants.
Investigation
Resume
Similar facts
Log in or register to post comments