Apr 19

Sasquatch Documentary: Jeff Meldrum

Jeff Meldrum is a Professor of Anatomy and Anthropology and a Professor of the Department of Anthropology at Idaho State University. Meldrum is also Adjunct Professor of Occupational and Physical Therapy.

Meldrum is an expert on foot morphology and locomotion in primates.

Meldrum received his B.S. in zoology specializing in vertebrate locomotion at Brigham Young University in 1982, his M.S. at BYU in 1984 and a Ph.D. in anatomical sciences, with an emphasis in biological anthropology, from Stony Brook University in 1989 (then referred to as State University of New York at Stony Brook). He held the position of postdoctoral visiting assistant professor at Duke University Medical Center from 1989 to 1991. Meldrum worked at Northwestern University’s Department of Cell, Molecular and Structural Biology for a short while in 1993 before joining the faculty of Idaho State University where he currently teaches.

Meldrum has published numerous academic papers ranging from vertebrate evolutionary morphology, the emergence of bipedal locomotion in modern humans and Sasquatch and is a co-editor of a series of books on paleontology. Meldrum also coedited From Biped to Strider: The Emergence of Modern Human Walking with Charles E. Hilton.

7 Responses to “Sasquatch Documentary: Jeff Meldrum”

  1. Charles R

    I especially liked the part where Dr. Meldrum and Bob Miller put forward all their knowledge of the foot structure, and the locomotion , and the advantage this has for a creature this heavy and the environment it operates in. I really do not know much about Bob Miller, but he seems well schooled about the Sasquatch. I wish he had not been by that sunny window during filming, as it degraded the quality of the photos he presented. The person filming should have realized this and had him move.

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