Saturday, April 16, 2016

Is the Gigantopithecus the closest we'll ever get to the real bigfoot?

 

We first learned of the mysterious Gigantopithecus 81 years ago in 1935, when a German paleoanthropologist, Ralph von Koenigswald, walked into a Hong Kong pharmacy and found an unusually large primate molar for sale. Since then, hundreds of Gigantopithecus teeth and several jaws in China, Vietnam and India. Based on these fossils, it appears Gigantopithecus was, as you would come to expect, closely related to modern orangutans. Some Bigfoot hunters say Gigantopithecus is alive and well, hiding out in the forests of the Pacific Northwest. Other Sasquatch enthusiasts, however, point out this is unlikely, as Bigfoot is reported to be a swift, agile, upright walker—not a lumbering, 1,200-pound quadruped. More after the jump.

From mic.com:
Think Bigfoot is just a legend? Think again... maybe. Bigfoot, also called Sasquatch, is a mythical human-like, hairy creature whose unproven existence has inspired reports of sightings for years. But there's actually a long-extinct giant ape called Gigantopithecus that roamed the Earth hundreds of thousands of years ago — and its existence has lead some to wonder, is this the "real" Bigfoot?
According to the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO), which calls itself "the only scientific research organization exploring the Bigfoot/Sasquatch mystery," Bigfoot is "a large, hairy, bipedal non-human primate." Hmm, that sounds a lot like the Gigantopithecus, which was an enormous ape that stood more than 10 feet tall and weighed 1,200 pounds, according to Smithsonian.
While today's Bigfoot sightings are probably just wishful thinking, Gigantopithecus was very, very real. First discovered in 1935, the ape genus appears to have lived in South Asia and ate a diet of fruits, seeds and grasses like bamboo, Smithsonian reported. Like its modern cousin, the orangutan, Gigantopithecus probably walked on all fours using its feet and fists. 
It's not clear exactly why Gigantopithecus went extinct: It may have been hunted to death by other primates or had lethally low reproductive rates, according to Smithsonian. But some believers claim that Gigantopithecus and Bigfoot are one and the same, and that the giant ape never went extinct after all, theorizing that it's just hiding in forests and popping out periodically to surprise hikers.
But scientists seem certain that Gigantopithecus is long-gone, so it's huge fossilized teeth may be the closest we'll ever get to the "real Bigfoot."
 

No comments:

Post a Comment