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Half a century ago, Belgian Zoologist Bernard Heuvelmans first codified cryptozoology in his book On the Track of Unknown Animals.

The Centre for Fortean Zoology (CFZ) are still on the track, and have been since 1992. But as if chasing unknown animals wasn't enough, we are involved in education, conservation, and good old-fashioned natural history! We already have three journals, the largest cryptozoological publishing house in the world, CFZtv, and the largest cryptozoological conference in the English-speaking world, but in January 2009 someone suggested that we started a daily online magazine! The CFZ bloggo is a collaborative effort by a coalition of members, friends, and supporters of the CFZ, and covers all the subjects with which we deal, with a smattering of music, high strangeness and surreal humour to make up the mix.

It is edited by CFZ Director Jon Downes, and subbed by the lovely Lizzy Bitakara'mire (formerly Clancy), scourge of improper syntax. The daily newsblog is edited by Corinna Downes, head administratrix of the CFZ, and the indexing is done by Lee Canty and Kathy Imbriani. There is regular news from the CFZ Mystery Cat study group, and regular fortean bird news from 'The Watcher of the Skies'. Regular bloggers include Dr Karl Shuker, Dale Drinnon, Richard Muirhead and Richard Freeman.The CFZ bloggo is updated daily, and there's nothing quite like it anywhere else. Come and join us...

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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

ANDREW MAY: Words from the Wild Frontier

From Crypto Squad USA:
In Search of Orang-Pendek
The Grease Devils

From Nick Redfern's "There's Something in the Woods...":
Bound for Sumatra
Back from the Cryptid-Fest

From CFZ Australia:
Sumatran Stories: The Orang Pendek
A BIG thank you to our supporters...

From CFZ New Zealand:
Happy Feet stops transmitting
Happy Feet's $30,000 'not wasted'

From CFZ Canada:
Exploring the Wendigo as a Cryptid

D.R.SHOOP: The Green Hornet

I’m not actually certain this is a Green Hornet, but it makes a good title

ANOTHER MILDLY FORTEAN SNIPPET FROM THE 'OLD HONGKONG' NEWSGROUP


UFO Inspired Tree House
Cool tree house designed by Bertil Harstrom looks like an alien spaceship.


Unique exterior with classic round porthole windows hides a modern and comfortable living space with separate levels............

PRUDENCE UPDATE

Prudence went to the vet yesterday. He is pleased with her progress, and she is healing well after her operation. However, she is still not allowed to climb stairs or jump up onto the furniture. She has to go back for another checkup in a fortnight.

Poor Pru. She is really quite depressed at the moment as she is not allowed to sleep anywhere that she likes to sleep and is forced to sapend the night in the kitchen rather than in bed with Corinna and me. But it is all for the best. I hope that she will forgive us eventually...

OLL LEWIS: Sumatran Turtle Power

Whilst there is still no news from Sumatra, Oll is hard at work looking at the forteana of that strange island...
According to some cryptozoologists, off the coast of Sumatra and in other oceans there lurk turtles of immense size. These creatures, the ones reputed to exist in the waters off Sumatra and in Indonesia in particular, are often known in the Western world by the grandiose name ‘The Father Of All Turtles’(TFOAT). Like most cryptids TFOAT started off as something that featured in local folklore, myths and artistic depictions but became attached to contempory sightings of unusual things at sea as a possible explanation.

Often when this happens, chroniclers of such events will become overtaken by the romance of a tale where the existence of a creature previously known only through myth could exist in the modern day. When writing the first edition of his book “In The Wake Of Sea Serpents” Bernard Heuvelmans included in his sea monster categories. It was considered to be one of the weakest of his categories, being based on only one or two contempory sightings and was dropped from future revisions. One mention of a beast that could be classed as the same category of sea monster as TFOAT comes from the Physiologus, a beastery published in the 2nd century AD:

““This time I will with poetic art rehearse, by means of words and wit, a poem about a kind of fish, the great sea-monster which is often unwillingly met, terrible and cruel-hearted to seafarers, yea, to every man; this swimmer of the ocean-streams is known as the asp-turtle.

“His appearance is like that of a rough boulder, as if there were tossing by the shore a great ocean-reedbank begirt with sand-dunes, so that seamen imagine they are gazing upon an island, and moor their high-prowed ships with cables to that false land, make fast the ocean-coursers at the sea's end, and, bold of heart, climb up on that island; the vessels stand by the beach, enringed by the flood.

“The weary-hearted sailors then encamp, dreaming not of peril.

“On the island they start a fire, kindle a mounting flame.

“The dispirited heroes, eager for repose, are flushed with joy.

“Now when the cunning plotter feels that the seamen are firmly established upon him, and have settled down to enjoy the weather, the guest of ocean sinks without warning into the salt wave with his prey, and makes for the bottom, thus whelming ships and men in that abode of death.”

The Asp Turtle is almost certainly a mythical creation, given it’s gargantuan size, but it takes its inspiration from both Kraken (the submerging island) and from turtles with long necks (hence the ‘asp’ part of the name), like softshell turtles.

Some species of softshell turtles can grow quite large for a turtle. The most famous large turtles the giant Asian softshell turtles of Hoan Kiem lake in Vietnam, one of which that died in the 1980s measured 1.9 meters in length (the length if the head and long neck accounted for just under half of the total length). By turtle standards this is massive but not the gargantuan proportions one would need to classify something as a living version of TFOAT. The largest extant turtle ever found was a leatherback turtle which was washed up on Harlech Beach in Wales in 1988. The turtle measured just under 3 meters in length and its bones and preserved body are on display in the National Museum of Wales Cardiff (I recommend a visit if you ever find yourself in South Wales as it is one of the few museums in the world that are as good as the British Museum). However, even the Harlech turtle, which is so outside the normal size range of the leatherback to envisage any leatherback being much larger than this would be folly, would not be quite large enough to be TFOAT. A larger turtle was around in the late cretaceous period, Archelon ischyros which is known from fossils to have grown to sizes of 4 meters but there is no evidence that this species survived into the Cenozoic.

No living species of turtle, which we know of, is large enough to be classed as The Father Of All Turtles, which makes you wonder where the folklore in Sumatra about this beast comes from. One possibility is that it was in relation to a species of large Asian soft shell turtle that may have lived, or still lives on the island, deep in the rainforest, very occasionally one may have made it to the sea (Soft shell turtles can survive in brackish and polluted water) and have been spotted by locals who had never seen such a turtle before and it’s size could have been somewhat exaggerated by Chinese whispers. A scenario like that could be one way of explaining the scarcity of sightings of the cryptid, however without any evidence to back it up it remains just an assumption so don’t quote me on that.

HAUNTED SKIES: Chicago Daily News, IL 7.7.53


http://hauntedskies.blogspot.com/2011/09/chicago-daily-news-il-7753.html

OLL LEWIS: Yesterday's News Today

http://cryptozoologynews.blogspot.com/

On this day in 1947 the film actor Sam Neil was born. Neil is best known for playing Dr Grant in Jurassic Park 1 and 3, Damien in The Omen III and Dr Weir in Event Horizon.
And now the news:

Cane toads proving highly adaptable - Fast colonis...
Breeding spoonbills return to Holkham
British flowers are the source of a new cancer dru...
Salmon can sniff out predators
An extra mouth to feed
New Species of Ancient Predatory Fish Discovered

Don't mess with pike (nature red in tooth and claw warning):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mI71Hsy_PaU

CFZ PEOPLE: Corinna - she can't stand up for falling down

http://cfz-nz.blogspot.com/2011/09/happy-feets-30000-not-wasted.html

CFZ NEW ZEALAND: Happy Feet's $30,000 'not wasted'



http://cfz-nz.blogspot.com/2011/09/happy-feets-30000-not-wasted.html

CFZ SUMATRA EXPEDITION: Dale on orang pendek




It is unlikely that we will get much news from the Sumatra Expedition over the next few days, and so - in the meantime - Dale Drinnon links to some posts about the elusive creature that this expedition and its three redecessors have been hunting...

http://frontiersofzoology.blogspot.com/2011/09/monday-may-17-2010-dale-drinnon-orangs.html