Cryptozoology Museum
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Cryptozoology MuseumIt appears the Cryptozoology Museum in Portland Maine is open for business. I was just browsing their website, http://www.cryptozoologymuseum.com, and came across a picture of a replica of a large hairy beast of a creature with the following caption:
"The centerpiece of the collection is the once elusive eight feet tall, 400-pound "Crookston Bigfoot," created by Wisconsin artist Curtis Christensen, which was permanently added to the collection of the International Cryptozoology Museum in 2004. " What do you think they mean by the words: "once elusive?" Sounds to me that they either mean they have found it. Any other ideas before I write them?
Re: Cryptozoology Museum
I can only assume that it means that they now have an artists concept of various descriptions of people claiming to have seen a similar 'elusive' thing. Sort of like the seating chart and guest list for "The Last Supper".
Re: Cryptozoology Museum
Were you there Ninja? I really didn't think you were that old, but one never knows. How accurate was DaVinci's fresco? I've always wondered why everyone sat on one side of the table and no one used the other side. Isn't it easier to talk when people use both sides of a table?
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Very funny ProfWag....
Re: Cryptozoology MuseumJust kidding you NinjaPuppy. I wouldn't tease you if I didn't like you!
Re: Cryptozoology MuseumI think elusive is used with wishful thinking in mind.
Scimitars were not available - beware January 19, 2038 is upon us.
Re: Cryptozoology Museum
Possibly. I think I'll write them and ask though. The way I read it, if something was "once elusive," then that means it's no longer elusive and has now been found. For example, the Titatnic was "once elusive," I believe...
Re: Cryptozoology MuseumBTW, that other topic about 'coincidence' or syncrochity or whatever that was....
Would you believe that last night I was asked by another person if I was at the last supper? Talk about a coinkydink. Then today I saw 11:11 somewhere. Geesh, I gotta stop hanging out with you guys.
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Oops, I've got an update. Their website doesn't list an e-mail address so I can't ask. Imagine that, a museum that doesn't have e-mail. Whowuddathought. Wag
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There you go Ninja! Proof of the paranormal!
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Proof of the paranormal??? More like proof that I'm older than original sin.
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Wellllllll, I'd love to know. Did you commit it?
Re: Cryptozoology MuseumDuring the 19th and early 20th centuries, many a clever taxidemist was able to trick not only wealthy collectors, but even museums into buying "specimens" of non-existent animals.
(eg. P.T.Barnums famous "mermaid)." This practice was once so widespread that when Australian zoololgists of the Victorian era sent back the first stuffed specimen of a duck-billed platypus to Britain, they received a curt telegram from scientists at The Royal Society of Zoology telling them that their "joke" was most unappreciated! Well, platypus are so damnably rare that few Aussies have seen one outside of a zoo. - (And sometimes not even there)! So them Brit scientists could be forgiven for thinking that us colonial larrakins were having a lend of them! It would take a braver man than I to say what rare animals may, or may not, exist on land or in the deep oceans.
Re: Cryptozoology MuseumVery true Warrigal. I have no idea what kind of things are out there that we haven't discovered. All I know for certain is that the Crypto Museum said that Bigfoot was "once elusive." That tells me they found one and I've been searching for him for 3 decades and I want to see the real thing!
Re: Cryptozoology Museum
No. My name is not Eve and my husband's name is not Adam. I don't even like apples unless they're baked in a pie.
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