Thursday, February 20, 2020

A Challenge to Reason: Gustavo Rol and His Prodigies


February 12, 2020

Gustavo Rol in his study | Source



In a previous article (Quester, 2019) I introduced readers to some aspects of the life of Gustavo Rol (1903-1994), to whom many attributed disconcerting paranormal feats. I propose here to try and bring into clearer focus the man’s character and personality; his efforts to contextualize his powers - which he referred to as ‘possibilities’ - within a spiritual and ethical framework; and to debate the credibility of the extraordinary occurrences ascribed to him over more than six decades of his adult life.

By way of introduction, I begin with a few representative anecdotes reported by Remo Lugli (1997), a highly respected Italian journalist and writer. His book is generally regarded as one of the most accurate biographical accounts of Rol’s life, whom he regularly frequented from 1972 to 1980. Lugli includes numerous testimonies from his own experiences, and from several other sources (the complete collection of anecdotes can be found in Rol, 2018).

Source

An Experiment with Books and Cards


Lugli tells us of a letter to the Turin newspaper La Stampa, published in the 20 August 1978 edition and signed by Diego de Castro, director of the Institute of Statistics of the University of Turin, and an investigator of paranormal claims. De Castro begins by concurring with professional debunkers that most ostensibly paranormal phenomena are fraudulently produced: most, though not all. And he recounts that nearly two decades earlier Rol had been invited to lunch at the house of de Castro’s father in law, that the academic also attended. At one point, Rol invited him to pick at random a book from among a set of twenty volumes with identical hardback covers. He then asked him to choose also at random three cards from a deck belonging to the house owner and select based on the outcome a book page number. He was next instructed to hold the still closed book in his hands and press it on his chest. The book, which Rol never touched, was authored by Victor Hugo. Rol then wrote in French ‘The Valentinians slept with their bears’. De Castro opened the volume and looked up the first lines of the page, which read ‘The Valentinians sleeping with their bears’. The same procedure was followed with accurate results with one Italian and one German book. De Castro challenges anyone to find the deception in this demonstration.


Federico Fellini in the Seventies | Source


Of a 6 of Clubs, a Hornet, and a Famous Movie Director


On the 6 August 1965 edition of the Milan based national newspaper Corriere della Sera, noted journalist and writer Dino Buzzati recounts a few episodes involving Rol and Federico Fellini - the director of acclaimed movies such as La Dolce Vita, 8 1/2, Amarcord and several others, whose centenary birth is currently being celebrated around the world -. Fellini and Rol enjoyed a close friendship that lasted from 1963 until the death of the the artist, in 1993.

The Oscar winning director told Buzzati of another ‘experiment’ also involving cards, which turned out to be somewhat disturbing.

Rol had invited him to pick up at random without showing it a playing card from a deck, which happened to be the 6 of clubs, and then to indicate which card he would like it to be turned it into; Fellini chose the 10 of hearts. Rol then instructed the artist to hold the selected card against his chest, and to make sure never to look at it. Fellini suspected that the injunction was perhaps a sly invitation to do the opposite... in any case, he was much too curious, and stole a look at the card by slightly lifting it from his chest. ‘And then I saw – in Buzzati’s reporting of Fellini’s testimony - an horrendous thing that words cannot describe.... matter was breaking up, a grey and watery mush that was quiveringly decomposing, a disgusting amalgam in which the black club symbols were melting and red streaks emerging... At this point I felt a hand grabbing my stomach and turning it upside down. An indescribable nausea... and then I found in my hand the ten of hearts.’(p. 143). Fellini felt sick and could neither sleep nor eat for two days.

Fellini again, still as reported by Buzzati. The artist and Rol were seated on a bench in the lovely Valentino Park, not far from Rol’s home in Turin. The latter was silent, a bit melancholic, immersed in his thoughts. A baby sitter was seated on another bench at some distance, seemingly about to doze off; her charge, an infant, was sleeping in a pram. Fellini noticed that an unusually big hornet was making rounds just above the baby carriage. ‘Look over there - he cried - we better rush and chase it away’. ‘No, no need of that’, was Rol’s reply. He pointed his right hand in the direction of the insect, snapped his fingers, and the hornet immediately fell onto the ground, stone dead. ‘Oh, I am sorry - Rol continued – I should not have let you see this!’(p. 143 ).

Parco del Valentino, Turin Italy | Source


Annamaria Is Very Sick


Rol frequently visited hospitals trying to be helpful to patients, and on several occasions addressed strangers on the streets advising them of seeing their doctors urgently, having perceived a danger to their health that apparently was always confirmed. He was also repeatedly asked by physicians and surgeons to help them with a diagnosis and even to attend especially challenging surgeries, and according to these practitioners he was invariably helpful.

The following episode is fairly typical of several others. On a day in August 1972 in Turin Rol happened to meet an acquaintance, the owner of a car repair shop. He found him in a state of dejection and asked the reasons for it. It was about his daughter Annamaria, recovered in a hospital for a severe case of meningitis. She was in a coma, and according to the medical team her case was hopeless, probably terminal. Even if she recovered from the coma, he was told, she would be seriously handicapped for the rest of her life. Rol requested a photograph of Annamaria, and when he had it in his hands declared with assurance ‘We shall save her, do not worry, we shall save her’. (p. 140). He left with the photograph. A few days later the girl recovered from her coma, steadily improved, and was eventually declared in complete remission, with no adverse consequences. The curing physicians regarded this as a sort of medical miracle. Annamaria went on to enjoy a full and healthy life, married and had two children.

St. Joseph of Cupertino is lifted in flight at the 
site of the Basilica of Loreto, by Ludovico Mazzanti 
(18th century) | Source


Why Did Rol Refuse Any Test of His ‘Possibilities’?


On the front page (!) of La Stampa on 13 August 1978, Arturo Carlo Jemolo, a highly regarded jurist and academic, addressed a ‘respectful’ appeal to Gustavo Rol - whose seriousness, disinterestedness and moral integrity he fully acknowledged ‘along with everybody’ - that he accept to submit to a rigorous scrutiny of his extraordinary ‘experiments’, by allowing for instance the introduction of audiovisual apparatus in his home when producing his marvels, and more generally by submitting to laboratory based tests of his abilities. The article generated a number of letters in the following days from members of the academic and scientific community, including the one by de Castro referred to above.

Jemolo’s invitation was by no means the only one that Rol received over the years from researchers in Italy and abroad. He invariably declined to submit to such ‘scientific’ tests. Also, although some of the ‘experiments’ that he carried out either in his own or in friend’s homes were attended by magicians - supposedly especially adept at detecting trickery -, he admitted these individuals purely on a basis of friendship, and always refused to invite other professional stage magicians who had repeatedly made such a request.

A few magicians who never attended Rol’s experiments claimed that a large part of them - especially those involving the manipulation of playing cards and others seemingly requiring telepathic and clairvoyant powers - could be duplicated with the use of ordinary techniques employed by stage conjurers and illusionists.

Whereas this may well be the case in a general way, it is essential to appreciate that reproducing a certain effect under conditions different from those applying to the original experiment is hardly probatory for dismissing the latter’s authenticity. A stage magician can simulate to great effect a person’s ability to levitate through the use of appropriate contrivances. This hardly denies by itself the reality of levitation if indeed obtained under non contrived circumstances, as claimed for instance for a number of Christian mystics and saints (most notably perhaps Saint Joseph of Cupertino (1603-1663), the subject of a recent study by Michael Grosso, 2015). Also, as noted, a few magicians did attend Rol’s experiments, and testified to the soundness of his procedures.

Rol outlined a number of reasons for refusing any systematic testing of his abilities under well controlled conditions.

Perhaps most importantly, he always insisted that he was not in a position to produce or reproduce his phenomena at will, simply because he had no control over them. They occurred spontaneously, though not randomly, ‘almost like the impulse of an unknown order’, he wrote quoting Goethe, or often when driven by a desire to be helpful. The exercise of his ‘possibilities’ occurred in an altered state of consciousness whose access - it is not hard to imagine - was not favored by the kind of physical, psychological and social conditions a laboratory environment usually provides.

Many people, including some scientists, all too often tend to discount the fact that a method of investigation should be tailored to its object, not the other way around; and when they do, the results are unlikely to be satisfactory. For instance, Behaviorism, the dominant system of psychology in North America for a good half of the past century, in its drive to develop a scientific psychology modeled upon the physical sciences enforced research protocols from which not just the ‘soul’, but even the ‘mind’ was expunged, all that remained being the study of functional relationships between an extremely simplified ‘environment’ and basic behavioural responses, best exemplified by studies of animal behaviour. Although this approach did produce many valuable findings, it ultimately proved unable to do justice to the complexities of human nature.

In short, it is reasonable to require that a research methodology be appropriate for its subject matter. Rol himself in early September 1978 replied to the public invitations from Jemolo and others discussed above (Lugli, 1995, p.190 ff.). He noted that at one time he had believed that his ‘possibilities’ were biologically based, and as such, he seemed to imply, amenable to standard scientific investigation. Yet, after attempting no better specified ‘controls’ to identify the bio-psychological basis of his possibilities, he found that his powers vanished, and returned only after he dismissed this approach. He then realized that their occurrence had an altogether different origin. According to Rol abilities such as his belong strictly to the realm of spirit, which science at present is incapable of capturing within its physicalistic nets.

However, as stated by Franco Rol (2014), ‘[Gustavo] Rol was not contrary to scientific experiments on his ‘possibilities’, and he actually spent his entire life trying to find someone in the scientific field who was suitable to receive his knowledge through a long apprenticeship as it usually occurs in the spiritual fields (in these cases, one refers to ‘initiation’). No experimentation that did not respect these criteria could be contemplated.'

Unsurprisingly, Rol’s invitation went unheeded.

Along with a refusal to subject himself to procedures of control on ‘methodological’ grounds, other variables played a role in his choice. The very idea of control carries a thinly disguised inquisitorial whiff, perhaps even including the suspicion of fraudulent behavior. This in itself could be regarded as an offensive, unnecessary and undesirable a state of affairs to submit to by someone like Rol, who never sought to gain material advantages nor explicit celebrity status from his experiments. He also always indicated that his ‘possibilities’ were effectual and deployable only within a strict ethical injunction of their being of clear benefit to others.

He insisted that undue emphasis upon his experiments detracted the attention from what these experiments pointed to and what their real significance was, which most mattered to him.


Kellar's "Levitation of Princess Karnac" | Source

A Skeptical Viewpoint


Of course, these explanations can be interpreted in a radically different way. Quite simply: Rol possessed none of the skills attributed to him; he was only a supremely gifted magician and illusionist, as indeed intimated by some members of the Italian Committee for the Control of Affirmations about the Pseudosciences (CICAP). Rol refused to submit himself to stringent controls because they would have revealed the all too earthly nature of his supposed powers.

As shown by the anecdotes described above and in my previous article, many of Rol’s feats involved real world, naturally occurring situations. Regarding the reality of these, all we have is the testimony of those who witnessed them. How believable are they? Were they perhaps in their majority dishonest, or the naive victims of trickery, or all too willingly self-deluded?

Giuditta Dembech, a friend and collaborator who has extensively written about Rol (e.g., Dembech, 2005), noted that ‘Entering his apartment was crossing a threshold into a marvelous place. One felt like Alice in Wonderland.’ (History Channel, 2014). And Remo Lugli wrote that Rol’s home ‘appeared to many as a place to dream about yet unreachable, a fairy tale address. Among his admirers, if one could boast of having been received by Rol at his home, he was looked upon as a rarity, as a person blessed by destiny, and was immediately overwhelmed by questions’ (1997, p. 29).

Is this the key to so many wondrous tales from so many people? To be able to tell the world, not only of having met the great man, but also of having assisted to one of his prodigies, the reality of which one would testify to even when personally uncertain of its reality, or even by being a willing participant in a collective deception, in order to gain a measure of glamour from it? Being admitted to Rol’s circle of intimates was notoriously difficult. What chances would one have of being retained within this circle if one were to express doubts and uncertainties about what had been seen?

A skeptic would likely find this line of reasoning entirely serviceable as a way of dismissing the reality of the many ‘impossible things’ attributed to Rol, which deeply challenge the established intellectual order, and offend the narrow rationality upon which a materialist’s world view is based (see also Quester, 2019b, 2019c). The skeptic’s explanation is most likely the correct one, she might argue, since it is by far the simplest, and based upon, not just scientistic prejudices, but the evidence of our lives, in which the marvellous rarely if at all makes its appearance for most of us. This sort of reasoning is often seen as a loose interpretation of Ockham’s razor. This would be ironic in this context, considering that the franciscan friar used it to defend the reality of miracles...

But then again, how really plausible, rational, and ‘simple’ is such a view? Rol produced his phenomena for over 60 years, in the presence of a conspicuous number of people: decent and honourable so-called ‘ordinary’ citizens, as well as denizens of the high society, many highly educated professionals including physicians and surgeons who did not hesitate to draw from his mysterious gifts in the more difficult cases, and a large number of internationally acclaimed personalities, who presumably did not need to accrue extra glamour from the frequentation of Mr. Rol. Were they all self-deluded, or worse still tacit accomplices in a deception that went on for so long?

Mariano Tomatis, a skeptic, recognizes that mere tricks could not have sufficed in creating a prestige as broad as the one Rol enjoyed. What is needed, it seems, is to realize that Rol had extraordinary charisma. His very presence - people often commented upon his commanding physique, his penetrating eyes, his authoritative manners, especially his awesome reputation, and the aura of mystery that surrounded him - enabled him ‘to act on the perception of those who saw him in action, managing even to shape the inner world of his spectators’ (Tomatis, 2009). In other words, Rol could induce people to perceive - and to further convince themselves that they were actually seeing - what was not there, or rather what he wanted them to believe was there: nothing else was needed.

In terms of this view, it was Rol’s personal charisma that led to his being granted ostensibly supernatural powers, which belief in turn induced people to perceive and attest to the impossible in accordance with his commands. But where did his remarkable charisma come from, really? What brought it about?

Max Weber (1864-1920), the immensely influential sociologist, wrote extensively upon the origins of authority in society, including what he referred to as 'pure charisma' (see Hansen, 2001). And he emphasized that the granting of such charismatic authority demands that the recipient first prove him- or herself by performing miracles, by displaying superior paranormal powers. In Weber’s view then the display of such powers is the precondition for a person’s charisma, whereas in Tomati’s thinking as I understand it the attribution of paranormal powers, which led people to perceive and believe in accordance with the charismatic’s Rol’s wishes, resulted from his otherwise acquired authority. Were Rol’s remarkable personal attributes enough? Unlikely. What then? Plain trickery? If so we are back to the beginning, for Tomatis doubts this to be a sufficient factor.

The question of whether Rol was but an illusionist in turn begs the question of his motivations, and of his character. Was he the kind of person who could be tempted by a long life of deceit? What could he gain from it, given that beyond a selected group of friends and acquaintances he always refused to give public demonstrations of his abilities, refused to appear in TV shows, declined to be turned into a celebrity or a sort of guru surrounded by throngs of adoring disciples, never accepted any money from those he helped, and indeed frequently and generously helped people in material, physical and psychological distress? With very few exceptions, he was the recipient of a very large number of attestations of, not just his extraordinary abilities, but also of his benevolent personality and ethical scruples.

I reported in a previous article (Quester 1919a) some comments about his abilities; I may add just another one here: Prof. Giorgio Di Simone wrote that Rol ‘is beyond discussion one of the human beings most endowed with those capabilities which through their effects supersede the ordinary barriers of the physical, psychical and spiritual world, [thus enabling him] to draw on a multiplicity of perceptions and paranormal manifestations that raise him to his own dimension, a superhuman dimension...’ (Lugli, 1997, p. 172).

As for Rol the man, Dino Buzzati wrote in 1965: ‘Something beneficial radiates [from Rol] onto others. This is the essential characteristic... of those rare men who rose, by transcending themselves, to a high spiritual level, and as a consequence to authentic goodness’(Rol, 2014).

Nico Orengo, an Italian writer, poet, and journalist, saw in him an ‘extremely religious’ man, and thought of him as a ‘lay saint’.

Rol was a friend of the Agnelli family, the powerful founders of the then Turin based automaker FIAT, and of Vittorio Valletta, its CEO of from 1946 to 1966, who wrote of his ‘admiration’ for Rol and his ‘ultra-humanitarian work’. Cesare Romiti, another legendary CEO of FIAT spoke of him as a ‘mystery’ which ‘defies comprehension’.

I could continue with many other quotations emphasizing Rol’s probity and integrity; but the above ones should suffice in providing a sense of the nearly universal positive response an encounter with this man elicited.

Saint Peter Square, Rome | Source

Rol’s Spiritual Views


Gustavo Rol attempted throughout his life to understand his ‘possibilities’ by placing them within a spiritual context, which I shall but briefly touch upon here.

He always emphasized that he ought not be regarded as a nearly unique individual, a sort of mutant endowed with strange powers beyond the reach of most men and women. On the contrary, as he wrote in his diary: ‘Behind the visible world there is an invisible world hidden to our senses and to thought which is driven [bound to] by them. I have understood that man, by developing certain faculties, dormant in him, can penetrate this hidden world, the invisible world. Each one of us is an initiate, he has inside himself the key to knowledge. Magic is part of everybody’s life.’(as quoted by Izzo, 2016).

This invisible world is the world of spirit. According to Rol ’Each thing has its own spirit’(Lugli, 1997, p.3). What differentiates us from ostensibly inanimate objects is the fact that our spirit is ‘intelligent’: conscious, creative and capable of acting upon the material world even beyond the commonly acknowledged laws of nature. Along with spirit, ‘man’ is endowed with a soul who can aspire to immortality, which leaves the body upon death and returns to God who created it. The spirit instead remains on earth, as a sort of psychic residue, containing all the information pertaining to any individual’s history and abilities - an ancient view revived in the early 20th century in the West by Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925) under the term ‘akaschic record’, that Rol may have arrived at independently on the basis of his own experiences.

In the case of a human being, his or her intelligent spirit has the potential of being energized and activated through the mediation of individuals like Rol capable of entering a state of ‘sublime consciousness’ - which he defined in various ways, including as a state of union with the absolute. It should therefore be clear that it is not the ‘dead’ who come back, as in the spiritualist tradition, and who intervene in seances through the mediation of a medium: just their intelligent spirit. Rol always expressed his extraneity to both the views of spiritualism and its practices.

On the other hand, Rol always declared himself a fervent Christian, and specifically a Catholic one; therefore the question of how his views cohere with Roman Catholic doctrine is of some interest. To my knowledge, the Church never pronounced itself on Rol’s thought. His views on the 'intelligent spirit' in particular have been regarded by some as fundamentally extraneous to Catholic doctrine (e.g., Introvigne, 2000).

It has been suggested (Rol, 2012) that this term be understood as referring not to a specific doctrine, but to an empirical fact, which ought to be accepted as such. Whereas this approach has the merit of defusing the matter somewhat, not everyone would be prepared to grant the term this status. Regardless, as philosophers and historians of science have made clear over the past decades, even within the most mature scientific disciplines ‘naked’ facts are in very short supply, for a scientific ‘fact’ acquires its status and significance within the context of a given theory: it is always, in other words, ‘theory laden’. Therefore, the question of how this notion - and Rol's overall views - related to his Catholicism seems to me to retain its interest.

In a letter to his brother, Rol wrote that ‘saying that God is in the sun, in the worm, in the ash of a cigarette, even in a playing card is to assert the truth.’(Rol, 2012, p. 425). And God of course is also in us, our higher attributes reflecting the fact that we were made in God’s image. It seems also clear that Rol regarded God not just as coextensive with nature, as in pantheism, but also transcending it. In philosophic parlance his views can therefore be regarded as a variety of panentheism. This view seems to me to accord with a number of Christian Churches, including the Orthodox Catholic Church, the closest to the Church of Rome on spiritual grounds. And of course, with Non-Western metaphysical traditions as well.

Rol assigned great importance to the spiritual underpinnings of his possibilities and their manifestations. As noted, he repeatedly asserted that these remarkable phenomena did not matter in themselves – except I would imagine in the case of the help he was at times able to bring to people in distress -, but as evidence of the higher reaches of human nature, for which ‘nothing is impossible’ once a certain level of spiritual development is attained; of the imperishability of its makeup; of the existence of God within and outside creation. He often regretted that this higher context went lost in favor of a facile fascination with his prodigies.

And Now What?


And so, dear reader, you decide: was Gustavo Adolfo Rol one of the most accomplished conjurers of all time, one of the most skilled illusionists, perhaps hypnotists who ever lived, who somehow managed to command the allegiance of not a few people over a very long life? Or was he something far more enigmatic and astonishing?

The choice as proposed here may seem too stark. However, although more nuanced interpretations are certainly possible, this dichotomy should be allowed to stand in a preliminary inquiry such as this one.

For what is worth, I remain uncomfortably aware of the ‘impossible’, in some cases even ‘outrageous’ nature of the feats attributed to him. I have abstained from reporting anecdotes even more extraordinary than the ones presented here because I could not bring myself to accept them. In absence of a direct personal experience under unsuspicious conditions, it is difficult for anyone with a questioning turn of mind to grant unqualified credence to the feats of this remarkable man. Even personal witnessing of this sort of events might yet leave many of us with a residue of doubt, as we are prone to doing under extraordinary circumstances - ‘I cannot believe my eyes!’-.

The great American psychologist and philosopher Williams James (1842-1910), who investigated matters paranormal for many years (though of a somewhat different nature), remarked at the end of his long quest that he remained as uncertain about the true nature of these phenomena as when he had started it, and even wondered whether such a state of affairs was meant to be, as if we were not allowed to peer beyond the curtain, so to speak.

He may well be turn out to be right.

Still, the more I learn about Rol’s life the stronger I feel that it may hide a truly wondrous mystery, and that it is in any case decidedly worthy of serious study.


Notes and References


1. All quotations from Italian sources are translated by J. P. Quester, the pen name of the author of this article.

Dembech, G. (2005). Rol - Il Grande Precursore, con CD, Torino, Ariete Multimedia.

Grosso, M. (2015). The Man Who Could Fly: St. Joseph of Copertino and the Mystery of Levitation. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Hansen, G. P. (2001). The Trickster and the Paranormal. Xlibris Corp.

History Channel (2014). Gustavo Rol. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9NgHo1AlTU

Izzo, P. (2016) Rol, La scienza e lo spirito. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reD_RT3ljZU

Lugli, R. (1997). Gustavo Rol – Una Vita di Prodigi 2nd ed. Edizioni Mediterranee.

Introvigne, M. (2000). Gustavo Adolfo Rol e La Chiesa Cattolica’. Cristianita’ n.299 (2000) Retrieved from https..://www.cesnur.org/testi/Rol.htm

Quester, J. P. (2019a) Gustavo Rol: A Great Wizard and Spiritual Searcher of the 20th Century. Retrieved from https://exemplore.com/paranormal/A-Master-of-the-Impossible

Quester, J. P. (2019b). Materialism is the Dominant View. Why? - Retrieved from https://owlcation.com/humanities/Is-Materialism-False

Quester, J. P. (2019c). Is Materialism False? - Retrieved from https://owlcation.com/humanities/Is-Materialism-Wrong

Rol, F. (2012) Il Simbolismo di Rol, 3rd Ed.

Rol, F. (2014). FAQ about Gustavo Adolfo Rol. Retrieved from ht
Rol, F. (2012) Il Simbolismo di Rol, 3rd Ed.

Rol, F. (2014). FAQ about Gustavo Adolfo Rol. Retrieved from http://gustavorol.org/index.php/en/faq

Rol, F. (2018). The Unbelievable Gustavo Adolfo Rol. Lulu.com

Tomatis, M. (2009). Rol, Lo Sciamano Subalpino. Retrieved from http://www.marianotomatis.it/research.php?url=rol12 tp://gustavorol.org/index.php/en/faq

Rol, F. (2018). The Unbelievable Gustavo Adolfo Rol. Lulu.com

Tomatis, M. (2009). Rol, Lo Sciamano Subalpino. Retrieved from http://www.marianotomatis.it/research.php?url=rol12


© 2020 John Paul Quester

A recently retired academic, with a background in psychology and philosophy.



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NWS ATLANTA PREDICTS COMING OF TORRENTIAL CTHULHU, TWITTER BRACES FOR ARMAGEDDON

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Feb 18, 2020

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Sometimes, when it rains, it doesn’t just pour — it roars with the epochal fury of a tentacle-headed Old One. At least, that was the apocalyptic forecast sent out by the Atlanta office of the National Weather Service on Monday, as a fresh storm deluge — one of several waves of rain to douse the area in recent weeks — came bearing down with all the eldritch fury of a wroth sea god.

Fed up with the relentless diluvian rampage and resigned to a fate of ceaseless rain, the weather service prepped social media followers by sending out an H.P. Lovecraft-worthy tweet, a baleful skyward cry of surrender to the overwhelming forces of nature (and, yes, the slumbering deep). “Come, lord Cthulhu,” it seemed to say — and the internet responded in kind.

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Things must be pretty dire when a certified meteorologist jokes that it’s raining hard enough to wake the elder gods from their eternal slumber. And never let it be said that Twitter users in Georgia aren’t well versed in Lovecraft lore. The responses weren’t just on point — they were plenty funny, too:

NWS meteorologist Ty Vaughn, the guy who wrote the tweet, told SYFY WIRE he was mildly surprised at the response his nod to one of the horror literati’s most sinister time ravagers has gotten. “Honestly, I had no idea that it would get such a reaction,” said Vaughn on Tuesday, a day after his tweet went viral. “I thought maybe a handful of people would get the Lovecraft reference, but I was surprised at how it took off.”

For the record, Vaughn’s enough of a Lovecraft fan to know his Cthulhu from his Father Dagon and Mother Hydra — but crafting an eye-catching tweet is about name recognition, and in the Lovecraft universe, there’s no bigger name than Cthulhu.

“Having the nutty meteorology background, I’m not saying I’m the most devout fan,” Vaughn modestly admitted. “I could have held up another elder god who’s probably more suited for heavy rain. But I knew Cthulhu would be a well-known name to people, so I went with that.”

There’s definitely an art to catching the eye of online readers in need of vital weather information, and Vaughan says the NWS Atlanta staff saves the funny stuff for moments that don’t detract from a crucial weather warning.

“All of our ‘hard’ tweets — watches and warnings issued by the National Weather Service — are very serious,” he said. “I would say the majority of the things we put out have that air of seriousness about them. But you can put out a million tweets every day, and if nobody looks at them, it doesn’t do any good. So I think the most important thing we can do is to highlight the messages, and to get people to engage whenever possible — and if that means doing something fun, then we go for it.”

As it stands, rain-soaked Georgia residents may have escaped Cthulhu’s wrath — at least for now. But as long as Cthulhu sleeps, perhaps just off the Atlantic coast and waiting to cast his shadow over the Eastern seaboard, well … you can never be too watchful.

“I think for the time being we’re going to be alright,” Vaughn joked. “But we’ve definitely got our eyes on it.”

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H.P. Lovecraft’s most iconic monster, Cthulhu, is an immortal god-like being whose origin and powers are far beyond human understanding.

When H.P. Lovecraft wrote his 1926 short story, The Call of Cthulhu, he shocked readers with Cthulhu, a monstrous being that rose from the ocean and re-formed after a boat crashed into it. Despite this being the creature’s only physical appearance, Cthulhu has continued to be submerged in the popular consciousness, from video games to 2020's aquatic horror, Underwater.

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While popular culture has the creature saving Christmas, Lovecraft himself had dropped hints at the creature’s dark origin and the might of his unimaginable powers, while at the same time refusing to give a clear look at the creature. Pulling together The Whisperer of Darkness, At The Mountains of Madness, and The Call of Cthulhu, it seems that the more that’s uncovered about the creature only yields questions about cosmic wars, doomsday cults, and how differently Cthulhu would be understood if humanity was able to look into its eyes.


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Cthulhu's Origin & Powers Explained (In Depth)


Cthulhu’s origin came to readers in pieces with The Whisperer of Darkness and At The Mountains of Madness. The 1931 novella The Whisperer of Darkness has the protagonist, literature instructor Albert N. Wilmarth, learn about the “Great Old Ones” – a race of cosmic beings from the depths of space. Here, it’s revealed that Cthulhu is a part of these “Great Old Ones,” which make up all of the cosmic beings in the Lovecraftian canon. While references to a war in the depths of space are made, At The Mountains of Madness clarified that Cthulhu and the “Great Old Ones” were all waging war against each other. Cthulhu landed onto Earth, creating the city of R’lyeh from nowhere before going into hibernation, taking the city with it to the ocean depths.

This is where Call of Cthulhu comes in. This 1926 short story showed readers the creature, described as being a “vaguely anthropoid outline, but with an octopus-like head whose face was a mass of feelers.” Since its time on Earth, a Cult of Cthulhu had developed, reaching all across the globe. This doomsday cult wished to awaken the Old One and bring about an apocalyptic age of darkness where the human race would destroy itself in a fit of madness.

This story also showed us some of Cthulhu’s immense powers. A single glance at the creature would drive a person mad just by looking at its face, meaning the video game based on the short story understood the character the best by giving him only a brief cameo at the end. Near Godlike and immortal, Cthulhu’s great strength is impossible to comprehend. When the protagonist of the story strikes it in the head with a boat, Cthulhu’s face merely reforms. As if all that weren’t enough, Cthulhu also possesses psychic abilities and can communicate telepathically – hence why it was able to create a cult while sleeping.


RELATED:Every Sci-Fi Horror Movie Releasing In 2020

Perhaps the most interesting fact about Cthulhu is that it isn’t the most powerful being in Lovecraft’s canon – that belongs to Azathoth, the center of the universe and the ruler of the cosmic deities. In fact, in the grand scheme of things, Cthulhu is merely a footnote in Lovecraft’s work. So why is Cthulhu so popular? Why do audiences care if Cthulhu will appear in Rick and Morty? What makes this creature so special? Publisher’s Weekly notes that Lovecraft’s stories like The Color Out of Space are still terrifying to modern audiences and have a lasting effect on culture and the horror genre. Beyond that, people have a deep-seated fear of what lies beneath, and in that area, Cthulhu absolutely delivers.
The Mainstreaming of Cthulhu: How a Fringe Horror Creation Became Popular

Auroch Digital Feb 15, 2018 ·

In the summer of 1926, a then little-known writer, Howard Phillips Lovecraft, was writing what would become his most well-known work, The Call of Cthulhu. This story would be published in Weird Tales in 1928 and would go on to have an immense cultural impact — one that is still growing today.

It would inspire countless short stories, novels, video games, films, songs, and more, all created by writers and artists taking the core Cthulhu themes, and putting their own twist into the canon of Mythos. The various iterations and spins on Cthulhu have resulted in everything from deeply disturbing renditions of the Great Old One as a dark, alien destroyer, to being rendered as a cute plushie toy! Perhaps plushie-hood was inevitable once Cthulhu and its ilk became a meme replicated millions of times in many languages.

Lovecraft himself would never know the success and cultural impact this or any of his other works would have. When he died in 1937 he would only know that his works had reached a limited audience, never having made enough from his works to make a living as a writer.

Yet over 90 years since he set out the plot of The Call of Cthulhu, the idea, themes, and the eponymous creature has finally reached the mainstream. The majority of us have heard of “The Call of Cthulhu” in one form or another.

I speak as a convert to this call. When I was young I discovered the Mythos and have been reading, writing, and creating works ‘inspired by’ it ever since! Right now I’m one of the team working on an adaptation of the hit roleplaying game Achtung! Cthulhu.
Cthulhu by Dim Martin

Cthul-what? What Are the Cthulhu Mythos?

For those unfamiliar with the Cthulhu Mythos, the titular Cthulhu is a titanic alien being who slumbers in the inhuman sunken city of R’lyeh which lies in the South Pacific. Once, many aeons ago, Cthulhu and other beings like him ruled the earth. Such is Cthulhu’s power, that even asleep he is able to influence the dreams of humans and has created a fragmented but global cult of worshippers who consider him a god. Both deity and disciples await the time he’ll wake, breakout of his watery prison, and retake his rightful place as the planet’s ruler.

If upon reading this article, you’re somewhat struggling to pronounce “Cthulhu”, then you’re not alone, and that was kind of Lovecraft’s point with the name — it’s meant to sound inhuman, and we struggle to pronounce it using our puny human voice boxes.

Lovecraft wrote a bunch of stories set within the same universe as Cthulhu, using common themes, characters, and objects, such as the fictional book ‘The Necronomicon’ which documents much of this terrible “reality”. Other authors joined in with this world building, adding dark gods, strange races of creatures, myth cycles, lost artifacts, more forbidden tomes, and so on until together they’d created a vast and rich narrative universe which has become known as the “Cthulhu Mythos”. Since Lovecraft’s death in 1937 other authors have taken up the mantle and the Mythos has expanded in many new directions.
The only known drawing of Great Cthulhu by H.P. Lovecraft

Lovecraft’s Writing Super Group

One of the interesting things has been how a circle of writers all borrowed each other’s names, places, and beings for their own work, creating in effect an “open source universe” in the Mythos. They delighted in referencing each other’s works, interweaving their stories into the Mythos tapestry. From their many letters to each other it seems this was as more an act of creative fun than a conscious effort of create a mythic narrative setting.

Yet the myth-maker’s work includes some highly accomplished writers. Robert E. Howard — who would become famous for creating Conan the Barbarian — penned a number of Mythos stories. For example “Worms of the Earth”, set during the Roman occupation of Britain, references the sunken city of R’lyeh. In return Lovecraft referenced a fictional forbidden tome Howard had created, Unaussprechlichen Kulten (also known as Nameless Cults) in his work. A young Robert Bloch — who would go on to write the famous novel Psycho that Alfred Hitchcock would adapt into one of the most influential horror films of all time — even appears as the character Robert Blake in Lovecraft’s short story The Haunter of the Dark. Lovecraft gleefully kills off the Bloch character, repaying some fun that Bloch had by adding a Lovecraft proxy to his tale The Shambler from the Stars.

They also referenced older works by authors they admired, such as Ambrose Bierce who created another fictional city — Carcosa — in 1886. Robert W. Chambers then reworked it into his 1895 highly influential collection of short stories, The King in Yellow, which Lovecraft and others then re-reference. Such examples are but a snapshot of how the Mythos is weaved into the works of a range of authors creating a mythic space that is greater than the sum of its parts.

I could go on, but if you want to explore Lovecraft and the work of his peers more, I strongly recommend subscribing to HPPodcraft, as they have some fascinating insight that goes into even further depth than I have here.!
H.P. Lovecraft

The Dreams of Cthulhu in Popular Culture

Wikipedia has a huge list of works inspired by the Cthulhu Mythos. In this article I’ll pick a few items to show the range of inspiration;
South Park — Has Justin Bieber destroyed by Cthulhu in one its most popular episodes.
Bloodborne — The critically acclaimed video game references the Mythos from its architecture, to the creatures within that architecture, to its narrative.
The Illuminatus! Trilogy — A trilogy that explores the idea of a global conspiracy. The trilogy references the Mythos many, many times and even has Lovecraft in it as a character.
True Detective — The HBO show’s first series is interwoven with references to the Mythos, most notably “The King in Yellow”.
Supernatural — The long running TV show explores the themes of the Mythos and also adds Lovecraft as a character within the show.
Hearthstone — Mythos fans will instantly recognise many of the references in the Whispers Of The Old Gods update.
The Call of Cthulhu Role Playing Game — The critically acclaimed RPG is set within the Mythos worlds and has itself both popularised and expanded on the setting. Many fans discovered Lovecraft via the game, myself included.

The Attitudes of 1920s Towards the 2020s

It would be wrong to write of the Mythos and not to note its problematic side. As many of the seminal works were written in the early half of the 20th century it is sadly not surprising to find that many of its attitudes towards race, gender, and sexuality that we now find uncomfortable (to say the least!) are replete across much of the Mythos works. The debate on how to frame this today still rages.

What I find interesting is how those voices that were marginalised or derided back in the 1920s are now rising to the fore to reclaim and reinterpret the Mythos as it evolves ever-onwards. For example, in the excellent The Ballad of Black Tom, African-American author Victor LaValle gives a retort to the thinly-veiled racism in Lovecraft’s The Horror at Red Hook. In the brilliant The Dream-Quest of Vellitt Boe, author Kit Johnson re-works Lovecraft’s Unknown Cadith through the eyes of a female protagonist. In the recent meditation on Lovecraft’s work by the acclaimed comic book creator Alan Moore, Providence, he knowingly cast the central character as a gay man living in 1920s New York, which is both a reflection and a rejection of Lovecraft’s view on sexuality.

Why So Cthulhu?

So from a handful of pulp writers toiling away (mainly) in the 1920s and 30s on fringe publications, and often for little or no reward, to almost a hundred years later and a globally recognised cultural theme that undergoes constant reinvention, recombination, and recalibration, we have the Cthulhu Mythos today. Try a search on Twitter for Cthulhu for an example of how relevant the work still is today.

Why have the Cthulhu Mythos become such a huge cultural phenomena? My feeling as both a fan and a creator of Mythos materials is that it comes down to two main reasons;
The “open source” nature of the original Mythos means it was born within the concept of others adding their own take to it. This also mean that it comes with a sort of “mashup-malleability” — it can be eternally remixed.
The core theme of the Mythos, that humanity is but a minor footnote in the history of Earth, speaks to us as part of our own fear and fascination with death and the concept of “the apocalypse”.

Mythos Mashups

One of the reasons that the Mythos has been so prevalent and enduring is how well it can be mixed up with other narratives to create new spins on a story. There is a huge amount of new creations from this “mashup” approach — too many to mention them all — but as they are a key part of Cthulhu appeal, it is worth exploring a few key ones here.

For example in Achtung! Cthulhu the setting has the occult-obsessed Nazis finding the remnants of the Mythos buried under the earth and setting about plundering them to merge with their inhuman science programs to create terrifying new weapons with which to win World War II. Like all good mashups this takes a kernel of reality and drops the “what if” question into it. It is well documented how obsessed the Nazis were with occult knowledge and ancient sitesm so this mashup asks “what if the occult was real? What if that occult was the Mythos?” and suddenly we’ve got the terrifying prospect that, in this fictional universe, all the resources the Nazis were pouring into esoteric research would pay dividends, but also that they are no longer the most terrifying being within the war — they are making pacts with beings older than humanity and who seek humanity’s total doom. The desperate struggle of WWII now takes on an extra terrifying dimension as the Allies seek to uncover the true nature of the Nazis plans and attempt to stop them. What follows is a secret war within a war — battling to destroy a secret Antarctic bunker or recover a forbidden tome from a hidden library in occupied Europe. Having been working within this mashup for a while, the connections are both fascinating and scary — the perfect ingredients for a roleplaying game setting! It’s also cool that if you have to take on the creatures of the Mythos, you’d rather have some serious military grade firepower to do that with!
Artwork from Achtung! Cthulhu — Modiphius Entertainment

It’s worth noting a few other mashups too, as this is such a rich seam;
What if the great Sherlock Holmes had to investigate the Mythos? That’s the premise of the collection of stories Shadows Over Baker Street, one of which (by Neil Gaiman), became a board game — A Study in Emerald.
What if the cold war powers discovered the secret buried Great Old Ones and tried to enlist them? Read the excellent A Colder War by Charles Stross for an exploration of this idea.
From Tintin: A Cthulhu crossover right up to Cowboys, Romans, Dark Ages, Cyberpunk, and more, creators are wildly experimenting with the Mythos, and to often great effect.

We are but a Mote in Cthulhu’s Eye

Political philosopher John Gray’s book Straw Dogs makes the point that we humans have not really fully come to terms with what Darwin’s Theory of Evolution tells us — that just as we as individuals are born to die, so too our species is born to die. Our own mortality is guaranteed, but so is that of our species, for what the fossil records show us is that the way things are is that species evolve from their ancestors, then die, perhaps leaving a descended species to take their place. Us humans, for all our clever tools and tech, are not that special — we’ll go the way of the dinosaurs too. The only questions are “how” and “when”.

We are, undeniably fascinated with the apocalypse. As Quentin Cooper remarked;

“It is not easy to get our heads round the Earth having existed for billions of years, probably existing for millions if not billions more, and our own life in comparison — however long and fruitful — being an almost infinitesimally insignificant instant in the middle of it all. So fleeting and so far from either end of the story that many of us behave like individual black holes, mentally warping time to write ourselves into the grand finale.”

Thus he argues our fascination with the end times is about us trying to make sense of the enormity of it all and our tiny place within it.

The Cthulhu Mythos is this idea times ten! Not only will we and the world end, but the very forces that will do it are right now plotting it, and some people are even helping them! We could try to stop them, but that is little more than treading water before the waves drown us.

Yet what else can we do? There is no redeemer to save us, we are just motes in the eyes of titanic alien beings whose only interests in us are as fleeting as ours in a bothersome fly we are considering swatting. It’s a scary, yet beguiling thought, rendering humans as moths to Cthulhu’s flame. As Lovecraft himself wrote;

“The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents.”

WRITTEN BY
Auroch Digital
Games consultancy & developer based in Bristol, UK. Wishlist our latest game Dark Future: Blood Red States 💥 http://bit.ly/wishlistDF
What Is Cryptozoology and How Do You Become a Cryptozoologist?


Luther Urswick
With interests in science, nature, history and the paranormal, Luther explores topics from a unique and sometimes controversial perspective.

Updated on June 17, 2019
 
Legends of strange creatures have been with us since the beginning of time. Cryptozoologists study these animals, and sort of out fact from fiction. | Source

What Is Cryptozoology?


The word cryptozoology means literally the "study of hidden animals”, those which some people believe are out there but science has yet to officially acknowledge.

Think of Bigfoot or the Loch Ness Monster. You know, those creatures that make your friends smile, nod and slowly move away from you whenever you bring them up in conversation. These mystery creatures (the animals, not your friends) are known as cryptids.

Cryptozoology has unfortunately earned a reputation with the mainstream public as a kooky diversion, practiced by the same guys who contact UFOs using modified CB radios while wearing hats made from tin foil. However, the good cryptozoologists are more about science than silliness, and have hatched some compelling theories over the years to explain sightings of unusual animals.

But even the best cryptozoologists have a lot working against them. A serious biologist or zoologist who spends their time and money in the pursuit of some mythical creature is risking career suicide. There is little grant money to be had for a researcher who decides to take a year away from teaching at the University and treks off to the Himalayas in hopes of meeting a Yeti.

Along with financial struggles and losing the respect of your mainstream peers comes the frustration of limited results for your efforts. Progress moves slowly in cryptozoology, and new discoveries and evidence are hard to come by. A researcher may spend a lifetime searching in vain.

So why do they do it? What makes these people tick? And do they ever really come up with any evidence aside from footprints and blurry pictures?

What Do Cryptozoologists Study?


If cryptozoology is the study of unknown animals than one could argue that by going into your backyard and turning up rocks in the hopes of finding some undiscovered bug you are indeed a cryptozoologist. You’re searching for unknown animals, and it’s a lot less expensive and time consuming than a month-long trip to Africa.

In fact, there are likely thousands if not millions of undiscovered insect species in the world, most of them in deep jungles. So why aren’t more cryptozoologists creeping around in the rainforest with a magnifying glass?

It’s not so simple. There is no debate that there are countless undiscovered animals in the world. However, there is a great deal of debate regarding the remaining species of large fauna yet to be discovered.

Cryptozoology is about finding the big animals, those creatures that many of us believe can’t possibly have gone undiscovered for so long. Some are so bizarre that there must be a supernatural component to their existence. Some are believed to be real animals, yet to be discovered by science.

Others are creatures that we know once roamed the Earth, but science tells us they went extinct long ago. Some say there are fascinating prehistoric beasts still lurking in far corners of the world, even living dinosaurs.

This is the part that separates cryptozoology from mainstream science. Logically, it makes little sense for many of these creatures to have eluded human detection, and we often dismiss the idea of their existence as borderline absurd.

Still, many of us are intrigued. Wouldn’t it be interesting if some of these fantastic tales of bizarre animals proved to be true? And that’s what makes a cryptozoologist get out of bed in the morning. We’re all interested in the possibility of the unknown, but they get out there and look for it.


How to Become a Cryptozoologist


If you’re considering a career in cryptozoology it’s probably a good idea to take a step back and think things through. While there are a handful of researchers who make a living writing books, lecturing and even hosting TV shows or radio programs, for most cryptozoologists it is a labor of love.

That’s an artistic way of saying you probably aren’t going to make much money doing it. In fact, you’ll spend a lot of money in the process. That doesn't mean cryptozoology isn’t a worthwhile pursuit, but you do need to be realistic about it.

There are no real qualifications to becoming a cryptozoologist, no degree programs and no governing body. You simply need to have an interest, and get out and do it. However, it is important to note that earning the respect of your peers (other serious researchers) will serve as a kind of credentialing process.

There are all kinds of monster hunters out there, and those who give cryptozoology a bad name are no help to the emerging science.

If you believe you want to pursue cryptozoology in your spare time, or even see if you can somehow make a career out of it, it’s a good idea to look at comparable mainstream sciences as your main area of study.

You may go to school and earn a degree in anthropology, zoology, marine biology or some other natural science, with the eventual goal of become a professor. Teachers get lots of time off, and at least you’d have a glimmer of hope for snagging some grant money for your studies.

Or you may wish to pursue another totally unrelated field. Cryptozoolgists come from every profession, and have taken many diverse paths. You may wish to choose something where you can make tons of money to fund your yearly expeditions in search of the Megalodon shark!

What Would You Do?

You're looking out your kitchen window into your backyard one morning and you spot Bigfoot! You get a clear view, and you're sure it is him. You even snap a couple of pictures. What do you do next?
Find a buyer for the pictures and cash in. Cha ching!
Get on the phone and tell everyone I know. This is so cool!
Tell only a few people I can trust to keep a secret.
Tell nobody and keep the pictures safe. It's a private experience between me and nature.
Check myself into the hospital. Hopefully this delusion was just caused by something I ate.See results


Where It All Began


No doubt humans have been telling tall tales about strange animals since the invention of language, but what we think of as modern cryptozoology is likely only a bit older than a century. In 1892 a Dutch zoologist named Anthonie Cornelis Oudemans published the manuscript called The Great Sea Serpent.

Here, Oudemans contends that sighting of sea serpents may be attributed to an as-yet-unknown species of giant, elongated seal. Oudemans was a respected scientist, the director of the Dutch Royal Zoological Gardens, but few took his book seriously. And they still haven’t found the giant seal.

Explorer and researcher Bernard Heuvelmans is another notable figure in early cryptozoology. In 1955 Heuvelmans published On theTrack of Unknown Animals, a book that earned him the title of Father of Cryptozoology . Heuvelmans’s book laid out a detailed account of cryptids from around the world, and inspired many a young mind to take up their pursuit.

Nowadays, you can hardly click on the television without coming across a show on cryptozoology. Finding Bigfoot, which airs on Animal Planet, is perhaps the most noteworthy. Destination Truth (Syfy Channel), and Beast Hunter (National Geographic Channel) are other shows which have delved heavily into the search for unknown creatures.

So if all these people are out there looking why don’t we have crystal-clear photos of a smiling Sasquatch with his arm around a researcher by now? What exactly are these people looking for, and what are the chances of finding it?

  
Oudemans's search for the legendary sea serpent led him to suggest sightings were due to a strange, rare seal. | Source

Strange and Elusive Creatures


Below you'll read about a few of the more famous creatures in the world of cryptozoology. None of these animals have been proven my mainstream science, but nevertheless there is plenty of anecdotal evidence to suggest they are out there. As a cryptozoologist you may specialize in the study of one or more of these creatures.

Bigfoot


He’s the star of the cryptozoology world, known to deftly elude researchers but then reveal himself to anyone with a camera incapable of shooting a clear picture.

Called Sasquatch in the Pacific Northwest, Skunk Ape in the South and Yeti in the Himalayas, Bigfoot is believed to be a species of undiscovered ape, possibly evolved from the extinct Gigantopithecus Blacki.

Sightings date back to Native American times, and in modern days Bigfoot is spotted in just about every inch of the United States and Canada, so it seems your chances of spotting him are better than they are for most creatures on this list.

Amazing Evidence from the Show "Finding Bigfoot"


Loch Ness Monster


Second only to the big, hairy guy listed above, Nessie is said to inhabit Loch Ness of Scotland.

It’s a huge lake and extremely deep. The lake is connected to the ocean by waterways, leading some to believe Nessie could be a sea creature of some kind, or at least travel that route to and from the ocean.

Furthering that theory is the debate of whether or not Loch Ness contains the food necessary to support a population of such large creatures. Like other lake monsters such as Ogo Pogo and Champ, Nessie is thought by some to be a Plesiosaur, a species of aquatic reptile long gone extinct.

Orang Pendek


Translated to “Short Person” in Indonesian, Orang Pendek is a small, hairy, bipedal humanoid creature spotted in the jungles of Sumatra.

Like a tiny Bigfoot, Orang Pendek may be an undiscovered species of ape or other primitive hominid. But it may also share a much closer relation to humans.

The discovery of the bones of a species of small, prehistoric human dubbed Homo floresiensis on the Indonesian island of Flores sparked the theory that Orang Pendek may be a related species, hidden in the jungles and rarely seen.

Mapinguari


It’s a giant beast that terrorizes locals in the South American jungles, with a mouth on its stomach, backward-facing feet, huge claws and a horrible stench.

It might sounds crazy, but some researchers think the Mapinguari may be a species of giant ground sloth thought to have gone extinct thousands of years ago.

Megatherium was a species of massive sloth that some researchers think may have existed as recently as 15,000 years ago. Could it be that this beasty that terrorizes natives in the jungle is actually a living Megatherium? Until somebody finds one, we just don’t know.

Megalodon Shark


Thousands of years ago a massive shark over 50 feet in length stalked the world’s oceans and some say it is still around.

Like a monstrous great white it fed on marine mammals, in this case enormous whales and other large creatures. It was called Carcharodon Megalodon, and it was the apex predator of its day and the largest carnivore ever to exist on this planet.

While modern science says it went extinct thousands of years in the past, some say Meg is still around today, lurking deep in the ocean. Strange creatures once thought extinct have resurfaced before, and we still have a huge percentage of the ocean left to explore. Could Megalodon still be out there?

Mokele Mbembe


Is it possible that there are isolated places in the world where dinosaurs still exist, undocumented by modern science and lost to history?

Mokele Mbembe is a beast known to local tribes in the African Congo. It is described as having the body of an elephant with a long neck and small head. To some brave researchers, this sounds like a sauropod dinosaur.

But Mokele Mbeme isn’t the only dino still plodding around in Africa. Several different types of creatures have been spotted in and around the Congo River basin, leading some researchers to think a small remnant population of dinosaurs may well exist in Africa.

It makes absolutely no sense based on what we know of the history of the planet, but there is no denying that people are spotting strange things in Africa, and they describe them as dinosaurs.


 
Could some dinosaurs have survived extinction and still live today? | Source

Do You Believe in Strange Creatures?

“Do you believe” is really the wrong question to ask in cryptozoology. Because we’re talking about animals that may be real, belief is irrelevant. Science can and should bear out the existence of these creatures over time, if they exist. Any interest in exploring unknown cryptids should spur from the facts available, not some mystical belief in the wonders of the universe.

Most of these creatures, by way of sightings and other evidence, merit at least some level of scientific investigation. We’ve all heard the old cliché about the remaining unexplored parts of our globe, and what a shame it would be to ignore our curiosity for amazing discoveries. It would be an incredible thing to validate a legend.

Or would it? What if a population of Bigfoot were discovered and documented by mainstream science? True, it would amaze and shock the world, and the name of the researcher who found them would go down in history.

But what next? Do we put them in a zoo? Dissect and analyze them? While we all would like to see the mysteries of the world revealed? Would the final result of such a discovery be worth it? Perhaps some mysteries are better left alone.

No matter what is eventually discovered, it’s hard to imagine that mankind’s of the unknown will ever be satisfied. There will never be a shortage of stories of strange creatures or people willing to go out and look for them. There will always be a place in the world for Cryptozoology .

Is Finding Bigfoot a Good Idea?

What would happen if a population of Sasquatch were discovered?
They'd be tagged, bagged and carted off to some research facility.
On the surface it would seem like a good thing, but they'd be exploited soon enough.
Laws would be passed and they would be protected.
It would be awesome, and we're evolved enough to treat them right.See results

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