The scientific community remains, unsurprisingly, dubious.”The bottom line is this,” Yale neurologist Steven Novella wrote at NeuroLogica Blog: ”Human DNA plus some anomalies or unknowns does not equal an impossible human-ape hybrid. It equals human DNA plus some anomalies
A Texas veterinarian-researcher claims to have shown that the elusive creature known as Bigfootor Sasquatch is a human hybrid, descended from human females who mated with males of “an unknown hominin species.” In a statement released on Saturday, Melba S. Ketchum said that her conclusions emerged after she sequenced samples of purported Sasquatch DNA.
This is Bigfoot we’re talking about, a creature
that has never definitively been observed, despite decades (centuries?) of
reported sightings. Over the years, Los Angeles Times reporters Kim Murphy and Eric Bailey both wrote about scientific and not-so-scientific
searches for the possibly mythical man-beast.
Ketchum said the work was currently undergoing
peer review—the process by which scientific journals vet research for
publication—and that no further details of the analysis would be revealed until
the research was published. Most scientists are hesitant to make judgments about
research until data are published. University
of Wisconsin anthropologist John Hawks, an expert on human evolution, wrote on his
blog that he was withholding judgment until results were available. “No
data, no discovery,” he wrote.
Judging on the basis of the information Ketchum
and her team did release, at least one skeptic argued that the little bit known
about DNA sequencing results didn’t necessarily indicate that an “unknown
hominin” was involved at all. At NeuroLogicaBlog, Yale neurologist Dr. Steven
Novella suggested that the samples that appeared to contain DNA from an unknown
hominin may rather be contaminated samples from plain old modern humans. “The bottom line is this,” he
wrote. “Human DNA plus some anomalies or unknowns does not equal an impossible
human-ape hybrid. It equals human DNA plus some anomalies.”
The good news, for those curious about this, is
that the chatter will continue. In addition to Ketchum’s data, results should
emerge from the Oxford-Lausanne Collateral Hominid project, led by University
of Oxfordgeneticist Bryan Sykes, which will conduct tests on hair samples
supplied by the public and said to come from Yetis, Bigfoots and the like. Those
results should appear in a peer-reviewed journal, the Associated Press reported earlier this year.
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