Bigfoot Appeared after Experiments to Cross Apes with Humans
26.05.2010 03:27
Recently a hunter from the Kemerovo region of Russia saved a Bigfoot who was drowning in a river.
Countess
reports like this leave practically no doubt about the existence of
these creatures. Earlier we wrote about a Bigfoot and his descendants
living in Abkhazia, and suggested it was the oldest human-like creature.
Russia Today: Bigfoot saved from drowning in icy Siberian river (BELOW)
According
to another theory, Bigfoot is a product of crossing apes with humans.
The theory originated in Abkhazia in the apery of the city of Sukhumi.
The
place used to be popular but is empty now. In its best years the apery
had over 70,000 apes and monkeys running around, now there are only a
few hundred of them left. The bloody Georgian-Abkhazian war affected not
only people but the apes as well.
Zurab
Mikvabia, the director of the Institute of Experimental Pathology and
Therapy in Abkhazia (the official name of the apery) is trying to be
optimistic:
“We are now becoming interesting
again for the Russian science. The Institute is in preliminary talks
with Russia's Cosmonautics Academy about preparing monkeys for a
simulated Mars mission. “
Zurab Mikvabia is
skeptical about my suggestion that the apery was created specifically
for experiments in crossing apes and humans: “It is not quite correct.
There are more myths than facts about these experiments.”
The
director, however, satisfied my request to see the archives from the
1920s and invited his deputy Vladimir Barkai to join the conversation.
“From
the first stages of my scientific research I tried to arrange
experiments in crossing humans and apes. I assume that the Soviet
government could help me in the interests of science and propaganda of
natural historic worldview.” This is an excerpt from a letter from
Professor Ilya Ivanov to Anatoly Lunacharsky, People’s Commissar in
education, where he asked for $15,000 for an expedition to Africa, an
insane amount of money for those times.
Ilya
Ivanov had good reasons to refer to his pre-revolutionary experience. An
outstanding zoologist, he worked as a researcher in the Askania-Nova
natural reserve , where he artificially inseminated animals crossing
bulls with deer or gazelles. There were draft experiments on the way to
the most important one, a human-ape hybrid.
Vladimir
Rosanov, a famous surgeon who extracted SS bullets out of Lenin’s body,
requested 50 apes for experiments in transplantation of vascular glands
to the aging leaders of the revolution (first of all, Stalin). Rozanov
hoped to repeat the success of his colleague Sergei Voronov, who
immigrated to France in the 19th century where in a luxurious palace on
French Riviera nicknamed The Simian castle he transplanted apes’ genital
glands to wealthy patients. He had 90% success rate in body
rejuvenation. Rozanov required gorillas, baboons and chimpanzees that
were only available in Africa. Ilya Ivanov was the man to get them.
The
archives of the Sukhumi institute contain a protocol of the meeting of
the Presidium of the Academy of Science dedicated to Ivanov’s African
expedition. His coworkers warned him that Guinea women should not be
used for insemination with gorilla sperm. Things that are now obvious
were a topic of heated discussions 90 years ago.
At
any rate, $15,000 was allocated for the expedition (20,000 according to
other sources) and in February of 1926 Professor Ivanov and his son
Ilya, a senior at Physics and Mathematics department of the MSU, went to
Paris.
They sailed to French Guinea and settled at its experimental primate station in Kindia. It was difficult to catch clever, strong and aggressive chimpanzees. Bullets with sleeping aids have not been yet invented, and apes usually won in fights with hunters. Guinea locals used barbarian methods for catching apes. They hunted them down with dogs, made them climb trees and then made bonfires around those trees. The apes that could not stand the smoke were forced to jump down to the ground. The ground fights often left the hunters injured.
They sailed to French Guinea and settled at its experimental primate station in Kindia. It was difficult to catch clever, strong and aggressive chimpanzees. Bullets with sleeping aids have not been yet invented, and apes usually won in fights with hunters. Guinea locals used barbarian methods for catching apes. They hunted them down with dogs, made them climb trees and then made bonfires around those trees. The apes that could not stand the smoke were forced to jump down to the ground. The ground fights often left the hunters injured.
Ivanov’s son was one of those who suffered from a furious ape that tore his chest. The young man was hospitalized.
Another
part of the experiment, insemination of local women with apes’ sperm,
was complicated as well. Local women adamantly refused to participate in
the experiment. Ivanov heard plenty of stories about women raped by
gorillas, some of them were told to bear children. Women who were raped
by gorillas were considered impure, and they were killed with a silent
approval of the leaders.
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Bigfoot saved from drowning in icy Siberian river
29 August, 2010, 06:26
29 August, 2010, 06:26
A Russian hunter claims he has saved something that can only be described as Bigfoot from a frozen river in central Siberia.
Russian news agency Itar-Tass quoted a source in the administration
of the Tashtagol district of the Perm Region as saying that the incident
took place in April this year near the village of Senzaskiye Kichi. The
village is located 140 kilometers away from the nearest human
settlement and the only connection with its residents is by helicopter.
The latest flight to the village brought back a written report about the
encounter with the so-called Bigfoot.
The letter read that professional hunter Afanasiy Kiskorov together
with several other hunters was fishing when they heard a loud cracking
of ice and a howl. When they approached the source of the noise, the
hunters saw an unusual creature described as “like a huge man covered in
dark brown fur.” The creature was in the river, about 10 meters from
the bank and it unsuccessfully tried to get out of the water and stand
upright.
Kiskorov rushed to the rescue and reached out for the drowning
creature with a dry tree branch. “Bigfoot” then grabbed the branch, got
onto shore, and walked away.
Authorities in the Kemerovo Region have repeatedly released stories
of Bigfoot sightings over the past few years. According to them, those
interested in cryptozoology could help to develop the Siberian tourism
industry.
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