Coming soon to a Scottish Rite Hall near you? The Masons and Cryptozoology? Images.
Replica Cryptia: Okapis
This prehistoric relative of the giraffe is one of the first “darlings of cryptozoology.” Images.
Breaking News! Wild Safari Coelacanth
In a world media exclusive from Cryptomundo comes remarkable news about a new replica very special to cryptozoologists. Other prehistoric figurine news is likewise shared. Also, here is a hint of the museum developments. Images.
Rhino Feces-Eating Turtle Rediscovered
The Arakan forest turtle, once though to be extinct, has been found in a remote forest in Myanmar. The local name for this species translates into the “turtle that eats rhinoceros feces.” Image.
Coelacanth In Ganges River?
Breaking news out of the country of India gives some pause. Has a new population of coelacanth been discovered? Photo.
Yeti Hope: Leaf Muntjac Among 350 New Himalayan Species
Muntiacus putaoensis, the world’s smallest deer species, was among the discoveries. These finds do mean there are still active hopes for the discovery of Yetis. Images.
Age of Mammalian Discovery
“Most people don’t realize this, but we are smack-dab in the middle of the age of discovery for mammals,” says the Smithsonian’s curator of mammals. Image/chart.
Was Coelacanth Really “Discovered” in 1938?
Jerome F. Hamlin, founder of Dinofish, shares a question and area of some culturally-based confusion with Cryptomundo today. Images.
Comoros Crash: Update
Comoros, an archipelago between Africa’s southeastern coast and the island of Madagascar, is the source of the 1938 discovery of the coelacanth. Images.
Coelacanth Island Has New Tiny Bat {+ Photo}
The new species only weighs five grams. Updated with images.
Follow CryptoZooNews
Not Found
The resource could not be found.