Although accounts of an aquatic beast living in Scotland’s Loch Ness date back 1,500 years, the modern legend of the Loch Ness Monster is born when a sighting makes local news on May 2, 1933.
Yes, Chernobyl’s 25th Anniversary But No Mothman Was Seen

There is an acknowledgement that today is the anniversary of the infamous nuclear disaster. But one important fact needs to be repeated. No weird winged wonder was seen before the accident, however. Images.
Dover Demon Revisited

The enigma lives on, 34 years later. What’s new with this April cryptid? Images.
That Yeti Attack On A Sherpa Woman: UPDATE
Let us further critique “Hunt for the Abominable Snowman,” being rebroadcast often on National Geographic Channel. Specifically, one interview sticks out. Images. Video.
UPDATE: See comment from A&E writer, at end.
Wild Man of the Woods, 1831
What was it? It had a tail. Newspaper article, original content.
What’s Your Loren Number?

In comments below, put your Loren Number, and play this “six degrees of separation” cryptozoology game. Images.
Maine 1895: Hairy Wild Man Kills Lumbermen

This old case of a Windigo/Eastern Bigfoot or Marked Hominid might be explainable as a feral human. Images. Dürer art.
February 26, 1848: Bundyilcarno
“A creature described by the natives as something very similar to an ourang-outang is supposed by many colonists to exist in the mountain ranges at the back of Western Port,” writes our correspondent.
Sea Serpent Off Boston
Its head resembled a horse.
Were 1930s’ Sasquatch Stories Sexier?
At the beginning of the last century, the view of First Nations’ peoples was that many years ago a whole tribe of the wild men lived in Pacific Northwest. They were called “Sasquatch” (after 1929) or “hairy mountain men” (earlier). They lived in caves and hunted with clubs and stones. Is the debate about “human-like” Sasquatch about ready to heat up again? Images.
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