PDA

View Full Version : Why are bigfoot bodies never found?


Lawrence Leavell
07-08-2007, 01:57 PM
Bigfoot research has been ongoing for a number of decades, yet there is no museum or laboratory that claims they have a body. Why is that?

bigfootr
11-03-2007, 08:25 PM
how often do we find a dead bear or dead mountain lion in the woods? Almost never. Porcupines and rodents eat the bones of dead animals. And most dying animals hide themselves in caves, and other quiet places when they feel sick - and then die. We are not surprised we haven't found any Bigfoot bones.

Jan
11-28-2007, 12:15 AM
their dead for one thing. Even if they were to leave the dead exposed to the elements, they would decompose so fast and become nourishment to other creature that after a while there would be nothing left. Wolves, big cats, bear, rodents, birds, worms and beetles would feast upon the remains of the dead making short order of things and carrying body parts to the four winds in little to no time. Squirrels and smaller rodents are notorious for chewing and gnawing bone, For example: If you get lucky, you may find a deer antler intact out in the wood, however most of the time if you happen across one it has been chewed and gnawed upon by these little guys. Short work of bone and body tissue by the living.
As to their being no bone in any museum or institute, whom is to say there really isn't already? These places are loaded with bones that never get a second glance because there are so many.
Yours,
Jan

pattymac
12-03-2007, 05:17 PM
As to their being no bone in any museum or institute, whom is to say there really isn't already? These places are loaded with bones that never get a second glance because there are so many.

Many museums have vaults of bones waiting to be sent back to NA tribes. I know of a local one that has boxes stacked floor to ceiling of bones. I inquired about them when we were doing some contract work there. I was told that there were even more waiting to be sorted and returned.
As for animals that die. Its the circle of life. Mother Natures way of taking care of business.
Sometimes a body of an animal can be found in the woods. I suspect that it died of some detectable disease that other animals can sense and steer away from.

If you reason out the thousands of people that have walked before us and have passed. Can we account for every single one of them? Now take something that does not have the numbers of the human race. They are in obscure places its only reasonable that we won't find the evidence of them that we do of humans.

Lawrence Leavell
12-05-2007, 10:08 PM
I watched a show on the History Channel, Josh something-or-other, visiting a museum in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. He held up a Bigfoot skull for the camera. Could not have been anything else.

Jan
12-06-2007, 12:05 AM
There have been reports of bigfoot like beings for centuries from the area and other places in South America. I not certain of the location but there was a cave down there somewhere that was discovered some time ago with remains of a giant race of what they thought was humans. Problem was they all have the crest shaped heads. Not many items of what we would consider needful for survival was found in the burial site cave either. Yet they didn't really identify the remains of being those of human. This is just one of many they have found over the years.
Yours,
Jan

Tom Shirley
12-15-2007, 08:34 PM
It kind of goes along with the poll.

http://www.searchingforbigfoot.com/Possibly_The_Most_Important_Find_In_Bigfoot_Histor y

Tom S.

steve a
12-18-2007, 04:37 AM
also we must remember the acididy in the soil it self, or mixed with the humus, things dont last long at all, even when buried,

Galileo
12-27-2007, 10:05 PM
What is the mortality rate among the bigfoot population? What is the average age of death for males and females (if there is a difference in longevity)?

Oh, and how old is Fox?

Galileo
12-27-2007, 10:11 PM
I just thought of more questions. What is the mortality rate for infants? Is there a higher probability for death of a female in child birth? What is the leading cause of death among the bigfoot population? Starvation, accident, exposure, disease, old age?

Are there a lot of stillborn births?

Do they murder each other?

Jan
12-27-2007, 11:39 PM
What is the mortality rate among the bigfoot population? What is the average age of death for males and females (if there is a difference in longevity)?

Oh, and how old is Fox?

I have to honestly say I do not know the answer to this question above. I have been told their average life span is around the same as ours but I do not know this as a fact. It would depend on health conditions, food supply, tooth decay and the ability for them to chew and digest their food.
We guess that Fox was either three or four when my Grand father discovered him. That was in 1944 so he would either be 66 or 67 possibly 68 at the most. However Fox says he is 67 winters old. So maybe he knows his age for certain.
Yours,
Jan

Jan
12-27-2007, 11:50 PM
I just thought of more questions. What is the mortality rate for infants? Is there a higher probability for death of a female in child birth? What is the leading cause of death among the bigfoot population? Starvation, accident, exposure, disease, old age?

Are there a lot of stillborn births?

Do they murder each other?

I do not know the answer for sure to infants mortality rate. I do however know that Sheba had one still born that I knew of and that Nicki lost her second child before it was full term.
I know there is no soft spot in the child's head when it is a baby. So I do not know if this would cause the female more complications during child birth or not. I just don't know the answer for sure.
I would think that the leading cause of death would be disease and old age. I know that one of the young male bigfoot that was a son of Blackie's died at a young age after being very sick one winter. He had an awful cough and the next thing we knew they said he had died. All I know is that he sure was not around any longer.
There was only one still born that I know of and that was Sheba and Fox's.
Yes if they are really fighting they will kill each other. I know of three different unrelated incidents where reports have been that they did indeed kill one or more of their own. Warring tribes was two of these and deliberate killing of a bad one was another. There was another rumor from another area up north that said one had been killed from trying to harm a person that was helping them, that he rest of the clan took it out.
Yours,
Jan

Galileo
12-28-2007, 12:03 AM
Do you think Blackie is dead?

Jan
12-28-2007, 12:15 AM
Do you think Blackie is dead?

He and his mates left the old farm right after my grandfather passed away. However I do not think he is dead as of yet because I have had the others ask once in a while if he can come visit them near me. I always tell them to go visit him that I do not want him near me. I do not trust him.
Yours,
Jan

steve a
12-28-2007, 05:06 AM
i have read many sighting reports, where people seen as many as 4 bigfoot came and pick a dead bigfoot , that had been shot, and pack them on their shoulders and run away with it, to be buried, there are humans who have shot and killed a bigfoot, and bury them because they looked so human , they did not want to go to jail, and their are varmints and birds of prey that eat meat, then the acidity of the soil, all the natural humus of the woods, all this in consideration and all of the above, explains a lot of why we cant find dead body, bears aren't found any where dead, not even the bones, i killed a deer and field dressed it, and came back two hours later, and the after effects where gone, and absolutely no trace of any thing was left, not even the blood,

Lawrence Leavell
07-12-2009, 08:04 PM
Fox was born in 1942 or so. He is still alive. You do the math.