One Response

  1. Loren Coleman
    Loren Coleman March 12, 2006 at 11:51 am |

    The assumption is that when the plaster of Paris is poured, it will pick up any and all biological materials that may have detached from the cryptid foot into the track. This might include hair, skin, and even blood (if there were any open wounds on the foot). This is not to say there will be any of these pieces of evidence stuck in the casting medium, but that is the hope.

    When the Skookum cast was examined closely, it was found to have hair samples in the matrix of the plaster. These were tested for DNA, but the results appeared to show that human contamination had occurred.

    This foot-DNA-to-track-to-cast notion is conveyed in the quotation carried above: “The bottom of the cast still has the original soil that came into direct contact with the foot.”

Comments are closed.