“This six-toed print, along with three other prints, was cast in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. A Miwok Native, Littlebear, cast two right and two left feet all of which had six toes.” – Ron Morehead

“This six-toed print, along with three other prints, was cast in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. A Miwok Native, Littlebear, cast two right and two left feet all of which had six toes.” – Ron Morehead
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Lynn W
Interesting, I’ve heard of other animals with additional toes or less toes so why not a Sasquatch?
Mike B
I think coonbo might be right,inbreeding.
Jacqueline O
Polydactyly is a congenital condition characterized by having more than 5 fingers and/or toes. It is also a non-sex linked, (both male and female), autosomal, dominant gene with several different variations and occurs because of errors during the process of fetal development. The usual causes associated with this genetic defect are Ellis-van Creveld Syndrome, Smith-Lemli-Opitz, Rubenstein-Taybi Syndrome, Laurence-moon-biedl Syndrome, Carpenter Syndrome, Asphyxiating Thoracic Dystrophy, and Trisomy 13. Interestingly, the condition is more prevalent among African-American ethnicity.
Also, it should be noted that this gene can be traced back several hundred million years to the Devonian period (350- 420 mya) in which the trait concurrently evolved in tetrapods alongside the development of limbs with digits. As a result, the condition effects not only humans, but most animals such as mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and birds.
It would be logical to theorize that sasquatch possess this genetic trait as well, since both humans and non-human primates evolved on the same ancestral tree. IMO, this condition did not develop as a result of inbreeding…