I want to thank Ronald for sending this to me:
Report: Are We Ready for “Bigfoot” or the Loch Ness Monster?
December 21, 1977
Contact:
Division of Public Affairs
External Affairs
Telephone: 703-358-2220
Website: https://www.fws.gov/external-affairs/public-affairs/
What if they really did find the Loch Ness monster or the legendary Bigfoot of the Pacific Northwest?
Most scientists doubt that these creatures exist, but thoughts of the discovery of a new species that might be the closest living relative to man, or the possibility of finding a leftover dinosaur, excite the imagination of scientist and nonscientist alike. It also poses another question: Would such a creature be subjected to the same kind of exploitation as the giant movie ape, King Kong?
Scientists generally believe there are still many species of birds and mammals that have not been discovered because they live in remote areas and their populations are limited. After all, the gorilla and giant panda were only legends until the late 19th century when their actual existence was first confirmed by scientists. The komodo dragon, a 10-footlong lizard, wasn’t known to science until 1912. The coelacanth, a deep-water prehistoric fish, was known only from 65 million-year-old fossils until 1938 when a specimen was caught alive off the Madagascar coast.
Just last year a Navy torpedo recovery vessel dropped a sea anchor into 500 feet of water off Hawaii. But instead of a torpedo, it hauled up a 15-foot representative of a new species of shark. The dead shark, named megamouth after its bathtub-shaped lower jaw, had an enormous, short-snouted head and 484 vestigial teeth.
To be sure, no remains of today’s legendary “monsters” have ever been found. There are no living specimens in zoos or dead ones in museums. Most certainly, many “sightings” of these creatures are exaggerated or misinterpreted reports, and some are downright hoaxes.
But finding a Loch Ness monster or Bigfoot is still a possibility, and the discovery would be one of the most important in modern history. As items of scientific and public interest they would surely command more attention than the moon rocks. Millions of curiosity seekers-and thousands of zoologists and anthropologists throughout the world would be eager to “get at” the creatures to examine, protect, capture, or just look at them.
What would the United States Government do?
“I doubt we’ll ever have to do anything, because I don’t believe there are any of the things around to be discovered in the first place,” said Keith Schreiner, Associate Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The Service is the Government agency with responsibility for protecting endangered and threatened species.
“At least, we have the laws and regulations on the books to deal with newly discovered species.”
Schreiner acknowledged, however, that a good deal of international cooperation would be needed if extremely rare species were found abroad. And finding one on U.S. soil would pose serious problems too, Service officials agree.
Undisputed proof of a Bigfoot might cause an immediate, short-term problem no law could handle. Word of its discovery would he flashed around the world within hours. hysteria, fear, or panic might accompany the news in the area where the creature was located. The throngs of curiosity seekers, would-be captors, and others wishing to find Bigfoot would not only create a serious threat to the animal itself, but to public safety as well. Some officials doubt whether any State or Federal action short of calling out the National Guard could keep order in the area within the first few hours or days of the creature’s discovery. This could be essential until a team of scientists could do the necessary things to ensure the creature’s survival.
The key law in preservation of a species is the Endangered Species Act, which pledges the United States to conserve species of plants and animals facing extinction. This broad, complex law protects endangered species from killing, harassment, and other forms of exploitation. The Act prohibits the import and export of, and interstate commerce in, endangered species. American citizens cannot engage in commercial traffic in endangered species between nations, even when the United States is not involved. Scientists wishing to study endangered species are required to have a permit issued by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
But before a creature can receive protection under the Endangered Species Act, a number of actions normally must occur which involve recommendations from the public, scientists, and State and foreign governments where the species exists.
The first of these would be the species’ formal description and naming in a recognized scientific publication. In addition, if it were a U.S. species, the Governor of the, State where it was found would be contacted, as would the officials of foreign governments if it were found outside the United States. Only after such information was collected could the Service make a formal determination as to whether the species should be afforded endangered or threatened status.
For the Loch Ness monster, the first step has already been taken. Last year, a highly respected British journal published a description and proposed the name Nessiteras rhombopteryx, meaning “awesome monster of Loch Ness with a diamond-shaped fin.”
“Nessie,” as the creature is affectionately known by believers in its existence, has been periodically sighted in Loch Ness, Scotland, over the last 14 centuries. Loch Ness is a 2S-mile-long, cold, deep lake whose peat-stained, murky waters make positive identification of almost anything from photographs next to impossible. But the most recent reports, based on sophisticated underwater cameras and electronic gear, identify a 30foot-long creature with a massive, humped body bearing a small head and long slender neck with an immense set of flippers. Although no presently known aquatic organism answers this description, it would fit any of various species of prehistoric, carnivorous reptiles called plesiosaurs which lived 100 million years ago.
In recent discussion in the British House of Commons, members of Parliament were assured that if “Nessie” were found it could theoretically receive immediate protection since it had already been described and named, If “Nessie” were taken out of Britain illegally, it would be a violation of the U.S. Lacey Act to bring it into the United States..
Bigfoot, also known as Sasquatch, is purported to be an 8-foot, 900- pound humanoid that roams the forest and wilderness areas of the Pacific Northwest. One “eyewitness” described an obviously female Sasquatch as a “tall, long-legged, gorilla-like animal covered with dark hair and endowed with a pendulous pair of breasts.” It, too, has been described in publications and given a scientific name. In fact, so many people were stalking Bigfoot with high-powered rifles and cameras that Skaminia County, Washington, is prepared to impose a fine of $10,000 and a 5-year jail term on anyone who kills a Bigfoot. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers even lists Bigfoot as one of the native species in its Environmental Atlas for Washington. This year the Florida and Oregon legislatures also considered bills protecting “Bigfoot” type creatures. A Bureau of Indian Affairs policeman has 18-inch plaster cast footprints of the “McLaughlin monster,” a Bigfoot-type creature he saw last month in South Dakota.
Under U.S. Law, the Secretary of the Interior is empowered to list as threatened or endangered a species for 120 days on an emergency basis.
For endangered species in the United States, the Secretary can also designate habitat that is critical to their survival. No Federal agency could then authorize, fund, or carry out any activities which would adversely modify that habitat.
So long-term Federal protection of Nessie or Bigfoot would basically be a matter of following the same regulatory mechanisms already used in protecting whooping cranes and tigers.
“Under normal situations,” Schreiner said, “we must know a great deal about a species before we list it. How big is the population? Does it occur anywhere else? Is the population in danger of decline? Is its habitat secure? Is the species being exploited? What is its reproductive rate? Obviously, if a Bigfoot really were found we could use emergency provisions of the Act to protect it immediately. But for the record, I seriously doubt whether such a creature really does exist.”
Along with the hundreds of requests received last year to protect more well-known plants and animals, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was queried about protection for Bigfoot and the “Lake Champlain sea serpent.”
No requests have so far been received for the protection of the reputed foul-smelling Noxie monster, a 7-foot denizen of Oklahoma, or the skunk ape of the Everglades, or the infamous Mothman in West Virginia. But in time, they, too, might come. And when they do, they’ll be treated accordingly.
INTa 129.)-1t3
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Bryan H
Funny how the Govt. Says this, but at that time, they already knew bigfoot exist. LMFAO. Unless the preson making this statement had no idea. Right. Were all just puppets on string to the govt. With fat pockets to empower them.
David R
Just think what a Sasquatch Gal Bladder would be worth! Millions of dollars just for a teaspoon!
Greg T
Nothing would protect a species that has been able to go undetected for essentially ever better than our gubmint enacting emergency measures to protect them…
Greg T
Bigfoot gall bladder would be top shelf, right next to the powdered Nessie fin
Joyce N
they (the government) already knows it exists. so this article is really a joke. they put up road blocks to ever capture or kill a specimen of this animal. how many men in black or government service persons accounts do you have to hear to know they don’t want the bigfoot out of the bag? there’s probably already quite a few shot, killed and confiscated by the government. so it’s laughable when they keep going on about why there’s no body recovered. even if you had one, rest assured you won’t for long-the mibs will come in and relieve you of it. you call one office whether it be police, the feds, scientists-that info is going straight to the mibs. it will never make it to the public for viewing. they already know what it is. it’s not a new concept-never was. there have been reports from long before europeans overtook this land. they’re known. so until our lovely government decides to be honest with the people we’re not getting any information other than what wes and the other bigfoot groups give us. and some of those groups are in bed with the government. moneymaker has a show-why-because he’s garunteed to never find bigfoot with his crap investigations in exchange for a big fat paycheck. (ask yourself why is it moneymaker can have a tv show on the subject yet bob garrett is constantly harrassed for his research) ever see the episode with the strobe lights-yep-if sasquatch were there-they looked at that and told each other-that asshole moneymaker is here-go to the complete opposite side-he’ll never find us-(i’m pretty sure there’s probably been a few juvenile sasquatch taking bets that they could stand right behind him and he wouldn’t see them ) any real evidence he may have tripped on accidentally is more than likely already given to the government. he’s an insult to true researchers. but i’m sure he’s not the only one.
Sandra C
There is a movement to get the Endangered Species Act updated. When it was passed in 1973, there were only 109 animals listed. Today there are at least 1661. The last time the Act was updated was in 1981. https://www.fb.org/issues/regulatory-reform/the-endangered-species-act/
There are many problems with the Act. The degree of protection needed for various species needs updating. There is no respect for private property rights, or for the needs of farming, ranching and logging. There is inadequate regard for the protection of humans (we are also part of nature and deserving of safety considerations). It invites massive lawsuits, and creates a culture of dishonesty and corruption. There is also a problem with a very poor track record of success for the Act (the link above refers to a recovery rate of only 5%).
The problem with updating the Act is that it has to be approved by Congress…which we all know is a bipartisan mess.
I’ve been worried about what happens WHEN the existence of Sasquatch is proven and the Endangered Species Act kicks in, but then I realized that there are larger implications that would blow the whole thing up in a way the government might not be prepared for (and which I think is the real reason for the coverup).
The US economy can’t take the added blow that would occur from shutting down logging, hunting, farming and ranching in broad areas. I can also imagine the uproar that would result from people discovering the source of disappearances, the danger in our park system, and the general threat from these creatures. Alone of all potentially endangered species, these pose a serious threat to us. Very few people will be ok with protecting something that can (and perhaps will) pop your head off like a grape off the vine … not to mention invade your house, kidnap and eat your children, tear animals apart with its bare hands, damage your private property and drive you off of it. Every family would demand protection. They would not only want guns, they’d want ones big enough to offer serious protection. Few would believe these things can be confined in a protected area.
Consider too the difficulty protecting other endangered species from Sasquatch. Though there is perhaps one type that leaves people alone if it’s left alone, how do we even begin to protect the rest of the environment from it much less the other more aggressive creatures?
What I’ve gleaned from listening to several hundred accounts is that they are terrifyingly huge and powerful, they are hominids (not humans) that live like bears but have far greater intelligence than bears. Though some tolerate humans to an extent, they are incredibly dangerous. They have some advantages over humans in terms of sensory ability and infrasound, but lack the human capacity for conscience and understanding. I can’t help wondering what sane person would want very many of these things wandering around?
I do understand that all of them aren’t killing machines, so I’m not advocating wiping them all out. But as with Covid-19, there are some situations that do or should transcend politics. I don’t have all the answers, but I know that the ESA isn’t the answer. This fact will be much more clear when they try to apply it to Sasquatch. Following on the heels of a Covid-19 pandemic powerful enough to bring a strong economy to its knees, couldn’t this be the breaking point for citizens of the US?
I don’t need to see one to be terrified of them. I bet most Americans will agree that it’s a bad idea.
President Lincoln said (essentially) that the best way to get rid of a bad law is to fully enforce it. https://www.heritage.org/report/the-presidents-duty-faithfully-execute-the-law
I think enforcing the ESA to protect Sasquatch would touch off a firestorm a disconnected establishment that’s been running things their way for far too long doesn’t want because it’s the final straw that could break their power. This is the reason they’ve gone to such great lengths to keep the species hidden, not concern over jobs and the economy. Really … when was the last time the establishment worried about anything more than their own power? They boxed themselves into a corner with this one because they don’t understand ordinary people anymore. They don’t get at all how we feel or react because such things don’t fit neatly into statistical models.
Check out this link for additional information on the Endangered Species Act. https://www.fb.org/related/Regulatory+Reform