Above is the mysterious primate skull found at a North Dallas, Texas, construction site.
Compared to…
Bone Clones® Chimpanzee Skull
Pan troglodytes
Bone Clones® Borneo Orangutan Skull (Male)
Pongo pygmaeus
Bone Clones® Mandrill Baboon Skull (Male)
Mandrillus sphinx
Hamadryas Baboon Skull Cast (Male)
Papio hamadryas neumanii
Gelada Baboon Skull Cast (Sub-Adult)
Theropithecus gelada
Chacma Baboon Skull (Male)
Papio ursinus
What could it be?
Experts will determine the age of this primate skull found at a construction site.
“We all know it’s a primate,” said David Evans, 25, of Alvarado. “We just don’t know which kind.”
The skull was buried about five feet underground, he said, in muck. It’s six inches from front to back and two inches wide.
Most of the teeth, including one-inch canines, are intact.
Evans said the skull was discovered (a couple weeks ago) at the St. Alcuin Montessori School near Churchill Way and Preston Road.
A noted anthropologist for the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s office, Dr. Dana Austin, viewed photographs of the skull and said it was definitely an “old-world primate,” possibly a monkey or chimp.
She said it was impossible to determine from the photos the age of the skull.
Evans, who talked to other experts, said he believes it may be a baboon.
“From everybody at UTA and everybody I’ve been talking to, (it’s) possibly a baboon,” he said. “But how it got to 635, right there at Churchill and Preston, I have no idea.”
Evans and other workers also found a small bone nearby, apparently from the same animal.
“It appears to be part of a femur or hip,” he said.
Evans plans to sell the skull if someone offers him a good price, but also may keep it as a conversation piece.
“If somebody comes over, that’s an hour right there,” he said laughing.
Source: “It’s a Skull, But What Kind? Workers unearth unusual skull in North Dallas,” by Scott Gordon.
In Texas, in the 1980s, a band of baboons was supposedly sighted along the Trinity River.
Mysterious America (1983, 2001, 2006) by Loren Coleman.
A free-roaming group of Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) was brought to Dilley, Texas, in 1972 to save it from destruction in Kyoto, Japan, where the animals are regarded as a nuisance; in 1980 the monkeys became the property of the South Texas Primate Observatory and were confined for behavioral research at a ranch there. But in the late 1980s, their enclosure fell into disrepair and several escaped. The monkeys have roamed the south Texas brush ever since, their population swelling to more than 600 by 1995.
Mysterious Creatures: A Guide to Cryptozoology (2002) by George M. Eberhart.
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