Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cryptids are animals that cryptozoologists believe may exist somewhere in the wild, but whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated by science. Cryptozoology is a pseudoscience , which primarily looks at anecdotal stories, and other claims rejected by the scientific community.
The term cryptid is used by proponents of cryptozoology, a pseudoscience, to refer to beings that cryptozoologists believe may in fact exist but have not yet been discovered. This category is for notable examples of entities that cryptozoologists have considered to be cryptids .
Cryptozoology is a pseudoscience and subculture that searches for and studies unknown, legendary, or extinct animals whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated, [1] particularly those popular in folklore, such as Bigfoot, the Loch Ness Monster, Yeti, the chupacabra, the Jersey Devil, or the Mokele-mbembe.
This Louisville-centric cryptid has been known to take on the form of a creature that is half-man and half-goat (sometimes called the Goat Man), half-man and half-sheep, or a hybrid that is also ...
Cryptids closer to home. The squonk is a true Pennsylvania original, and one I’d love to meet, but if you want to road trip to nearby cryptid sightings, you are in luck: Central Pa. is full of them.
A famous Fort Worth-area monster is headed back to television, this time as a way to motivate Texans to explore the great outdoors. The Lake Worth Monster has been the subject of news stories ...
Flatwoods monster [2] [3]: Tall humanoid with a spade-shaped head. [2]Greys [4] [5]. Also spelled "grays" (in American English).; Roswell incident; Grey-skinned (sometimes green-skinned) humanoids, usually 1 m (3.3 ft) tall, hairless, with large heads, black almond-shaped eyes, nostrils without a nose, slits for mouths, no ears and 3–4 fingers including thumb.
Édouard Louis Trouessart (1842–1927), French zoologist and early proponent of a cryptid in Lake Chad [1] Marcello Truzzi (1935–2003), skeptic [ 21 ] and founder of several research groups including the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP)