Showing posts with label hoaxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hoaxes. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Farmer's spray paint prank raised bird watchers' hopes of a new species

Farmer's spray paint prank raised bird watchers' hopes of a new species

BIRD watchers' hopes they had discovered a new species of hawk have been shot down after a New Zealand farmer was revealed to be spray painting the birds pinkish-red and releasing them for fun.

In a judge's decision released this week, Grant Michael Teahan was found guilty of two charges of ill-treating an animal after he defended the charges in the Dannevirke District Court in November, the Manawatu Standard reports.

In early 2009, locals were mystified by the appearance of the strangely coloured hawks and sent photos of them in to the local newspaper.

However, when one of the hawks was hit and killed by a car the spray painting was discovered.

The SPCA began investigating and Teahan was uncovered when he asked his nephew to send a YouTube clip to the media, showing a man catching and shooting a magpie in a home-made trap, which was covered in pinkish-red spray paint.

Computers seized at Teahan's Dannevirke property had files, photographs and films relating to red hawks deleted.

Another file showed a cow that had been spray-painted with "Merry Christmas".

Palmerston North SPCA manager Danny Auger told the Manawatu Standard it was the most bizarre case he had worked on.

"Various people got involved, like experts who thought maybe it was a new strain or a new type of bird or whatever, but then feathers were being found and it was obvious somebody was actually painting these hawks."

Teahan, who will be sentenced on January 30, is considering appealing his conviction.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Piltdown Man: British archaeology's greatest hoax

In a few weeks, a group of British researchers will enter the labyrinthine store of London's Natural History Museum and remove several dark-coloured pieces of primate skull and jawbone from a small metal cabinet. After a brief inspection, the team will wrap the items in protective foam and transport them to a number of laboratories across England. There the bones and teeth, which have rested in the museum for most of the last century, will be put through a sequence of highly sensitive tests using infra-red scanners, lasers and powerful spectroscopes to reveal each relic's precise chemical make-up.
The aim of the study, which will take weeks to complete, is simple. It has been set up to solve a mystery that has baffled researchers for 100 years: the identities of the perpetrators of the world's greatest scientific fraud, the Piltdown Hoax. Unearthed in a gravel pit at Piltdown in East Sussex and revealed to the outside world exactly a century ago, those shards of skull were part of a scientific scam that completely fooled leading palaeontologists. For decades they believed they were the remains of a million-year-old apeman, an individual who possessed a large brain but primitive jawbone and teeth.
The news of the Piltdown find, first released in late 1912, caused a sensation. The first Englishman had been uncovered and not only was he brainy, he was sporty. A sculpted elephant bone, found near the skull pieces and interpreted by scientists as being a ceremonial artefact, was jokingly claimed by many commentators to be an early cricket bat. The first Englishman with his own cricket bat – if nothing else it was one in the eye for French and German archaeologists whose discoveries of Cro-Magnons, Neanderthals and other early humans had been making headlines for several decades. Now England had a real fossil rival.
It was too good to be true. As decades passed, scientists in other countries uncovered more and more fossils of early apemen that differed markedly from Piltdown Man. "These had small skulls but relatively humanlike teeth – the opposite of Piltdown," says Professor Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum, who is leading the new study. "But many British scientists did not take them seriously because of Piltdown. They dismissed these discoveries which we now know are genuine and important. It really damaged British science."
In the end, the Piltdown Man began to look so out of kilter with other fossil discoveries that a team led by geologist Kenneth Oakley, anatomist Wilfrid Le Gros Clark and anthropologist Joseph Weiner took a closer look and in 1953 announced that Piltdown's big braincase belonged to a modern human being while the jawbone came from an orangutan or chimpanzee. Each piece had been stained to look as if they were from the same skull while the teeth had been flattened with a metal file and the "cricket bat" carved with a knife. As Bournemouth University archaeologist Miles Russell puts it: "The earliest Englishman was nothing more than a cheap fraud." It had taken almost 40 years to find that out, however.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Maldives government complains of spoof atlas omission



Kurumba island in the Maldives Rising sea levels threaten to make the Maldives uninhabitable


The government of the Maldives has complained after the UK's Daily Telegraph website carried a satirical blog post saying the island nation is to be omitted from the Times Atlas of the World.

The supposed omission was said to be due to impending climate change.

The low-lying islands of the Maldives are at risk from rising sea levels.

The spoof blog post was taken seriously by several media outlets in the Maldives. The Telegraph blog post was written by a climate change sceptic, James Delingpole. On Monday, scientists said the new edition of the Times Atlas had exaggerated the scale of ice-cover reduction in another part of the world, Greenland.

Mr Delingpole's blog said the next edition of the famous atlas would continue what he called its "Climate Change alarmism", by completely erasing some very low-lying areas - the Maldives, Tuvalu and "major parts of Bangladesh".

He quoted a fictitious "spokesman" for the atlas as saying that in map-making, "emotional truth" was more important than actual truth.

Apology sought

Some Maldivian websites and newspapers took the satirical blog seriously.


Maldives Cabinet meets underwater When the Maldives cabinet met underwater, it was not because the island nation had disappeared

An opposition politician sent out a mass text message blaming the Maldives' president for the country's omission from the map, because he'd staged events such as an underwater cabinet meeting. A spokesperson for the atlas's publisher, HarperCollins, has confirmed to a Maldives website, Minivan News, that the blog post was bogus.

The Maldives' acting high commissioner in London has written to the newspaper's editor seeking a clarification and apology. He said the post had implied that his country's climate change plight was a con-trick, and this, he said, was despicable and hurtful. However, he added that Maldivians had as strong a sense of humour as anyone.

A Maldives government official told the BBC the Telegraph should not publish such "nonsense" under its brand name when it could be mistaken for news. But he said Maldives newspapers should also confess to having been duped.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-15027163

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Appeal to trace tiger toy owner after police alert

A concerned member of the public contacted police
believing the stuffed toy was a real tiger
22 May 2011

Police are trying to trace the owner of a life-sized tiger toy which sparked a major police alert in Hampshire over fears a real animal was on the loose.

Officers were deployed and a helicopter was scrambled with specialist thermal imaging cameras over the field, near Hedge End, on Saturday afternoon.

The scare stopped play at the Rose Bowl cricket ground for 20 minutes.

Hampshire police said the toy was being treated as lost property but they were investigating whether it was a hoax.

They said they did not know how it got there but was similar to one which would be won at a fair.

Tranquiliser darts

The alarm was raised by a member of the public who spotted what they thought was an escaped white tiger hiding in a field, through a camera's zoom lens.

Officers said they had responded as if it was a real incident, close to junction seven of the M27.

The stuffed toy is being treated as lost property
Animal specialists at nearby Marwell Zoo were enlisted by police to offer advice and were prepared to send a team with tranquiliser darts to overcome the tiger.

John Pullen, curator of mammals, said: "We offered advice to the police and we immediately gathered a team of staff who have been trained to deal with situations such as this.

"We were moments away from making the journey when we received a call from police to say it was a stuffed toy."

Golfers at County Golf Club were also escorted from the course and Saturday's cricket game between Hamsphire Academy and South Wilts was suspended for about half an hour.

Tony Middleton, Hampshire Cricket Academy director, added: "Rumours came round that there was a tiger on the golf course and we just carried on playing until a policeman came over and told us to clear the area.

"I assumed there was [a tiger] with everything that was going on, but we felt quite safe here."

Officers discovered it to be a stuffed toy after it rolled over in the down draft from the police helicopter.

"It is being treated as lost property but we don't know how it came to be in the field and whether it may have been a hoax.

"Police are keen to reiterate that they have a duty to protect the public and therefore take calls of this nature as serious as any other calls reporting potential dangers to members of the public," a spokeswoman said.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-13491268
(Submitted by Sherri Joyce)

Saturday, April 2, 2011

More than 1,000 people fall for Weymouth big cat hoax video

By Emily_P | Friday, April 01, 2011, 20:27

Wessex FM turned joker today with a spoof radio report that a big cat had been spotted prowling the relief road - and was captured on video.

In keeping with jokey traditions to mark 1st April, the Dorchester-based local radio station ran reports on its news bulletins that a schoolboy had spotted the large black panther-like creature as his mum did the school run. The story went that he whipped out his mobile and managed to film it. Wessex FM then posted the footage on YouTube and on its website and invited listeners to watch.

Hilariously, the video has scored more than 1,130 hits as hundreds of people clicked to see the first known footage of a 'Dorset Big Cat'. News reporters also interviewed "experts" who warned listeners to stay away from the dangerous creature. Big cat sightings are legendary in this part of the world, but concrete evidence they exist is hard to come by.

But what do you see when you watch the video? A person dressed in a giant pink panther suit, prowling about on a bridge overlooking the relief road, thenjumping into a Wessex FM bubble car and driving off.

After 12 noon the radio station kept running the reports - but Head of News Maria Greenwood stressed that research showed these sightings only happen on 1st April.

Did you fall for the joke? I did! Happy April Fool's Day! :)

http://www.weymouthpeople.co.uk/groups/animals/1-000-people-fall-Weymouth-big-cat-hoax-video/story-10909336-detail/story.html

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Bigfoot Hoaxers Not Even Trying Anymore


Mar 24, 2011

Adrian Chen — Bigfoot Hoaxers Not Even Trying Anymore Hey look! It's Bigfoot! No it's not. It's obviously some dude in a gorilla suit. But, nice try, Thomas Bryers of North Carolina.

According to YouTube caption, Bryers saw the bigfoot on March 22nd: "It came from out of the field from the direction of the creek and we later took photos of feet prints in a freshly plowed field. I jumped from the truck and took this video of it as it crossed the road in front of us." And for some reason the camera was completely out of focus and only had enough batteries for five seconds of filming.

Time was, you used to get a nice, long shot of fake Bigfoot. Now it's a measly five seconds? We can't take a minute out of our day, even for monsters. [Daily Mail via The Awl]

http://gawker.com/#!5785330/bigfoot-hoaxers-not-even-trying-anymore

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Bigfoot demands free speech

March 9, 2011 by Sean McTiernan

An American amateur filmmaker who was barred from a state park while impersonating Bigfoot says his rights have been violated.

In 2009 Jonathan Doyle dressed up as the crypto-zoological legend and then jogged around New Hampshire’s Mount Monadnock.

Afterwards he abandoned his disguise and interviewed hikers about what they’d seen.

Doyle said there’d been no complaints made to the state park service after his first bigfoot excursion: “People loved it. It was socially engaging,”

But when Doyle decided to return to the mountain on 19 September last year, Monadnock park manager Patrick Hummel brought it to the attention of his supervisor in an e-mail entitled “Bigfoot problem on Monadnock… not kidding”.

Hummel then ambushed Doyle during his next outing, telling him he was barred from filming in the park until he obtained a permit.

Amateur sasquatch Doyle’s response lawsuit is backed by the American Civil Liberties Union. He claims the state’s requirement that he pay for a permit and obtain a $2 million insurance bond before filming violates his right to free speech.

“The underlying activities are humorous, but the principle’s important,” an ACLU lawyer told the Associated Press.

“We’re talking about a very small-scale activity in a very large place. We don’t believe there’s any legitimate government role in regulation.”

http://newswhip.ie/viral/bigfoot-demands-free-speech-25261

Monday, January 10, 2011

Orange Gator Discovered in Florida, But Is It a Dye Job?

Sylvia Mythen, a 74-year-old woman from Venice, Fla., snapped the photo of this orange alligator sunning itself by a pond near her home. Florida Wildlife Commission experts have analyzed the photo and determined that the reptile's coloring is not genetic. Officials suspect the animal might be the victim of a prank but won't know for sure until they can examine it. Sylvia Mythen, AP.
Jan 7, 2011 – 6:51 PM
Dave Thier
Contributor

College football fans know the Florida Gators are orange and blue, but that, of course, is just a uniform.

In the wild, Florida alligators are a grayish black on top, with a lighter-colored belly. Usually.

One alligator in Venice, Fla., defies that rule. On Tuesday, 74-year-old Sylvia Mythen discovered an orange alligator sunning itself in a pond near her home, and it was so surprising that she had to get her camera.

After Mythen snapped the photo, she contacted her local news station and a biologist. But really, she just wanted to show her grandkids in Indiana.

"I thought, 'This is great. ... I'm going to snap a picture and send it to my grandkids so they think I'm one of the coolest grandmas in Florida,' " she told ABC 7.

Originally, the biologist thought the alligator could be part albino, but experts with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission have analyzed the images, and they have determined that the animal's coloring is not genetic. They suspect that the gator's coloring came from something in the environment.

Mud is a possibility, but Mythen is skeptical.

"If it was mud, he did a good job of covering himself ... every nook and cranny," she says.

Geoff Isles, district manager for an wildlife control company in Sarasota, Fla., is stymied.

"I would have no idea how to dye an alligator -- especially a normal skin-toned alligator in his natural state," he told AOL News. "Their skin is just so extremely thick that I don't know how, short of tattooing, you would get it that color."

He suspects a prank, especially considering the animal's strangely similar tone to the university mascot. The only way he said he could think of getting that done would be by using spray paint.

Theories abound, but until experts get their hands on the animal itself, it seems unlikely they'll be able to say anything definitive. Until then, maybe look for a UF fan with a few missing fingers and some empty cans of orange spray paint.

Orange Gator Discovered in Florida, But Is It a Dye Job?

Sylvia Mythen, a 74-year-old woman from Venice, Fla., snapped the photo of this orange alligator sunning itself by a pond near her home. Florida Wildlife Commission experts have analyzed the photo and determined that the reptile's coloring is not genetic. Officials suspect the animal might be the victim of a prank but won't know for sure until they can examine it. Sylvia Mythen, AP.
Jan 7, 2011 – 6:51 PM
Dave Thier
Contributor

College football fans know the Florida Gators are orange and blue, but that, of course, is just a uniform.

In the wild, Florida alligators are a grayish black on top, with a lighter-colored belly. Usually.

One alligator in Venice, Fla., defies that rule. On Tuesday, 74-year-old Sylvia Mythen discovered an orange alligator sunning itself in a pond near her home, and it was so surprising that she had to get her camera.

After Mythen snapped the photo, she contacted her local news station and a biologist. But really, she just wanted to show her grandkids in Indiana.

"I thought, 'This is great. ... I'm going to snap a picture and send it to my grandkids so they think I'm one of the coolest grandmas in Florida,' " she told ABC 7.

Originally, the biologist thought the alligator could be part albino, but experts with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission have analyzed the images, and they have determined that the animal's coloring is not genetic. They suspect that the gator's coloring came from something in the environment.

Mud is a possibility, but Mythen is skeptical.

"If it was mud, he did a good job of covering himself ... every nook and cranny," she says.

Geoff Isles, district manager for an wildlife control company in Sarasota, Fla., is stymied.

"I would have no idea how to dye an alligator -- especially a normal skin-toned alligator in his natural state," he told AOL News. "Their skin is just so extremely thick that I don't know how, short of tattooing, you would get it that color."

He suspects a prank, especially considering the animal's strangely similar tone to the university mascot. The only way he said he could think of getting that done would be by using spray paint.

Theories abound, but until experts get their hands on the animal itself, it seems unlikely they'll be able to say anything definitive. Until then, maybe look for a UF fan with a few missing fingers and some empty cans of orange spray paint.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Shark sighting a practical joke, but Massachusetts police not laughing

Thursday, August 26, 2010

SOMERSET — A practical joker in Massachusetts has taken advantage of recent shark sightings and caused a scare with a fake fin.

Police say about 50 people were drawn to a Somerset, Mass., cove on Wednesday night after someone reported seeing a shark fin in the water. Police tell the Herald News of Fall River that several 911 calls came in to Somerset and Swansea police.

Responding officers soon realized that the "shark" was just a piece of Styrofoam cut into a fin shape, wrapped in gray duct tape and weighted down.

There was no word on who pulled the prank.

Several Massachusetts beaches have been closed this summer after shark sightings. Police cautioned that the joke could have caused a problem had there been a real emergency call.

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2010/08/shark_sighting_a_practical_jok.html

Monday, August 23, 2010

Baboon on the loose? Girl starts false frenzy

Aug 21, 4:39 PM EDT

FLORISSANT, Mo. (AP) -- Police in the St. Louis suburb of Florissant spent a big part of the day looking for a baboon on the loose. A grade school went into lockdown. A woman scattered potato chips on the ground and made monkey sounds to try and lure the primate. But in the end, a 14-year-old girl admitted it was all a hoax after the picture she claimed to have snapped proved to be one she actually found on the Internet.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that the girl set off the frenzy Thursday by claiming she took a picture of the primate in her backyard. It was hours later that she told police she actually found the picture on the Internet and took a photo of it with her cell phone.

Police Chief William Karabas said the girl was sorry but she did not offer any explanation for the stunt.

"She was remorseful," Karabas said. "But the total emotional aspect of all this and the why is: who knows?"

The case will be referred to St. Louis County Family Court for review.

The girl's mother went to city officials and news media with the photo, prompting the search. It was after an identical photo was found in an Internet search that the story began to unravel.

Before that, schools took precautions, including keeping children in during recess. Chaos led to rumors. One woman in the neighborhood being searched said she owned a monkey. She made baboon-like noises and scattered Lays potato chips and Cheetos to try and lure the animal. Yet another woman who claimed to own a monkey walked around with a net.

Karabas said at least six extra officers were called in to help with the search.

Despite the trouble, the chief seemed more relived that no one was hurt than annoyed.

"You don't judge the people that do stuff like this, you just deal with it and move on to the next thing," Karabas said.

Adding to the confusion of the day was a statement released late Thursday by the girl's family, maintaining that such an animal was, in fact, on the loose in Florissant, and that the girl's story was not a hoax.

"While that particular animal was not that one, there is in fact something out in the area," the statement read, in part.

Information from: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, http://www.stltoday.com

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_ODD_MONKEY_HOAX

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Urban fox hunt video was hoax aimed at the media, say film-makers

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/06/urban-fox-hunt-chris-atkins

Urban fox hunt video was hoax aimed at the media, say film-makers
Chris Atkins and Johnny Howorth, the team behind Starsuckers, say film was
satirical swipe at press coverage of fox attacks
• Paul Lewis
• guardian.co.uk, Friday 6 August 2010 17.35 BST

It was the internet video that sparked a media outcry: grainy footage that seemed to show four masked men drugging a fox and later beating it to death with cricket bats in a London park that was posted on YouTube and Facebook earlier this week.

But the Guardian can reveal that the new sport of "urban foxhunting" was an elaborate hoax. The film-makers, Chris Atkins and Johnny Howorth, said no real foxes were harmed in the film, which was intended as a satirical swipe at "media hysteria" over the danger of urban foxes.

Animal rights campaigners had expressed fury over the "bloodthirsty" huntsmen, eliciting the support of MPs on Twitter and prompting an inquiry by the Metropolitan police's wildlife crime unit.

YouTube and Facebook removed the footage and the controversy was covered in news outlets including the Guardian, the Times, the Daily Mirror and the Daily Mail. The BBC was also duped, sending a reporter to Victoria Park, Hackney – the supposed scene of the crime. Amid a growing furore, the animal welfare group League Against Cruel Sports launched a campaign against urban foxhunting, while the RSPCA said it was investigating.

In today's London Evening Standard, columnist Sebastian Shakespeare went so far as to celebrate urban foxhunting as the first and best example of David Cameron's "big society" in action. In fact, the dead animal in the footage was played by a stuffed fox, the film-makers told the Guardian, while the live fox was played by a pet dog, Monty, with a bushy tail taped to its hindquarters.

The pair said they made their film "deliberately Pythonesque" in a bid to lampoon the media hysteria over urban foxes, and were surprised when the video was so widely assumed to be authentic.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Media Watch caught out by its fossil morality tale

Peter McAllister
From: The Australian
April 26, 2010

MEDIA Watch has done what any entertainment outlet, National Geographic included, does: craft an appealing narrative.

The timing is exquisite. Just six weeks after being spit-roasted on Media Watch, controversial anthropologist Lee Berger, has set the study of human evolution aback with the discovery of a possibly game-changing human fossil. The find has forced a grudging acceptance from his surprised critics. Despite his allegedly charlatan ways, the huckster apparently has his scientific uses.

In reality nobody should be surprised. Carnival showman types have been rewriting archeology since Indiana Jones was in leather shorts.

In the 19th century Heinrich Schliemann, war-profiteer and all-round charlatan, wrong-footed historians by proving Homer's mythical city of Troy so real he was able to haul away cartloads of its treasure. He even publicised his find by draping his wife in the Trojan "jewels of Helen". The Great Belzoni, the giant Italian Egyptologist who opened the second pyramid at Giza, went one better, funding his digs with public strongman performances such as lifting 12 men at a time.

Berger has not accumulated a Trojan treasure but he has amassed $6 million in private research support. He has likewise shown a Belzoni-like talent for publicity, lining up National Geographic funding and documentaries for his various projects.

But this is no cause for celebration, it seems. In fact, it is the apparent misdeed that got him on Media Watch. According to the ABC's watchdog, Berger's mixing of entertainment and science has led to a serious perversion of the latter by the former.

How valid is Media Watch's criticism? Leaving aside its tone of latent xenophobia "some [foreign documentaries] simply don't deserve to be gobbling up precious prime time on the national broadcaster" the program's main claim is that science stories are inevitably corrupted whenever a (foreign) media organisation mixes in at the research stage. Those damned Yank television companies can't be trusted to craft a straight story with our pure science, it seems.

The supreme irony, of course, is that Media Watch has fitted itself up nicely for the same charge. J'accuse, Jonathan Holmes.

Reviewing the National Geographic documentary on Berger's research into a possible fossil prehistoric pygmy population in the Micronesian nation of Palau, Mystery Skulls of Palau, Media Watch crafted a classic morality tale of villains and virgins, muddying the science dreadfully themselves in the process.

To give one example of the errors Media Watch lands itself in by taking sides in a science spat, Holmes quotes archeologist Scott Fitzpatrick as "proving" Berger's pygmy fossils are actually well within the range of modern populations. Indeed, they are the range of modern human pygmy populations, that is.

Holmes, of course, was able to find authors to rubbish Berger's work. Fitzpatrick, for one, describes Mystery Skulls of Palau as a pseudo-documentary. Yet these vitriolic claims are simply an unfortunate stock-in-trade of much scientific debate these days. Finding one academic to call another's work totally discredited is like shooting fish in a barrel. Numerous scientists have described the Homo floresiensis "hobbit" as discredited too, but that doesn't make that brilliant discovery any less remarkable.

What Media Watch has really done is what any self-respecting entertainment outlet, National Geographic included, does: craft an appealing narrative. Theirs simply features different heroes (Fitzpatrick) and different villains (Berger). The point is there is no valid reason, beyond the needs of a good story, for elevating one above the other. Berger's work is just as legitimate as Fitzpatrick's, and Media Watch is in no position to choose between the two on anything other than the grounds of prejudice.

Do Berger and National Geographic really deserve their roles in Media Watch's morality tale? I don't think so. What, for example, is the end result of their dastardly efforts? One, some interesting research on Palauan fossils was done that wouldn't have been otherwise. Two, a lay audience now knows a little more about themselves and the world they live in. And three, a few thousand males aged 16-35 (the main documentary demographic, if National Geographic's research is to be believed) were entertained for an hour or so late on a Tuesday night, instead of being out committing crimes (another favoured activity of that demographic, apparently).

True, Media Watch is on safer ground criticising sensationalism in modern science entertainment. With every researcher hyping their find to the skies there is a danger the viewing public will suffer revelation fatigue. After all, the past few years have seen a succession of supposed "missing links", of which Berger's African find is only the latest. Yet this, too, is simply what has to be done to craft an entertaining yarn for a wide audience.

Holmes chided Berger for "knowing a good story when he sees it". He does, thank god. And thank god too, for the sake of science, that he tries to tell it.

Peter McAllister is a Perth based lecturer in science communication. His book, Manthropology, is under development as an SBS-National Geographic co-production.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/media/media-watch-caught-out-by-its-fossil-morality-tale/story-e6frg9bo-1225858121977

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Victorian collection raises £100,000 at Dorchester auction

9:00am Thursday 15th April 2010
By Joanna Davis

PEOPLE with a penchant for the bizarre, the unusual and the downright grotesque crowded out an auction house for a sale with a difference.

They came from all over the country to buy their very own oddities from an eclectic Victorian collection.

Objects from a recession-hit museum on the Isle of Wight went under the hammer at The Grove sales room of Duke’s of Dorchester.

A winged cat, one of the highlights of the auction, was the subject of a price war from bidders.

The 1860s stuffed feline, primed for flight with bird wings fixed to its back, made £2,800.

A shrunken human head believed to be a genuine Javara Indian head of a man from Ecuador fetched £2,400.

An elephant-headed boy in a red velvet coffin, reputedly found living wild on the banks of the Congo, went for £1,900.

Torture items from the Brading Collection – formerly the Isle of Wight Waxworks – were particularly popular with bargain hunters.

Paul Birch successfully bid £1,100 for a man trap, complete with a life-size human ankle dripping with fake blood.

He said: “I saw one like this on TV and I thought ‘I’ve got to have one of those’.

“I think it’s just what every home needs and I’m going to put it in the living room where everybody can see it. This has been a really fun auction with a lot of good characters, normally people at auctions are very hoity-toity.”

Brave Paul, of Portsmouth, also bought a scold’s bridle for £300 and handed it over to his girlfriend Tegwen Owen.

The scold’s bridle, or brank, was an implement designed to be fitted on to a female head, apparently for the punishment of nagging women.

Museum owner Robert Ball also auctioned off the collection’s main draw – its taxidermy section.

A komodo dragon went for £1,200, while Battling Bruno – a brown bear wearing boxing gloves – went for £1,000.

Bruno was said to have fought all comers at rodeos throughout the mid-West and was stuffed when he died by request of Queen Victoria.

The stuffed animals were thought to have been collected by Professor Copperthwaite in the 1800s.

The sale fetched more than £100,000 and attracted around 300 people.

http://www.dorsetecho.co.uk/news/8099286.Victorian_collection_raises___100_000_at_Dorchester_auction/
(Submitted by Mark North)

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Tiny community is troubled by Bigfoot sightings

The sheriff says it's a prank, and a Bigfoot researcher agrees — this time.

By SHEILA STOGSDILL World Correspondent
Published: 4/6/2010 2:21 AM
Last Modified: 4/6/2010 6:53 AM

JAY — For the past month, the Delaware County Sheriff's Office has been bombarded with telephone calls about the legendary elusive apelike creature known as Bigfoot.

It seems the creature was roaming the wooded countryside near Kenwood — a small, isolated community about 20 miles southwest of Jay and surrounded by acres of trees and fresh springs of water.

"We had calls from people that were worried and others wanting to know if it was a joke," Sheriff Jay Blackfox said.

For weeks, cell phone photos and an audio recording circulated throughout the community of 200.

Trouble was, there was no Bigfoot. It was a prank instigated by a group of boys, Blackfox said.

The infamous black-and-white, cell-phone photograph is known in Bigfoot circles as "Jacobs Photos."

Reports state it was taken on Sept. 16, 2007, in northwestern Pennsylvania. In October 2007, the Pennsylvania Game Commission referred to the creature as a "skinny mangy bear."

At first Kenwood folk were concerned, then the rumor quickly turned to a prank, now a joke, Blackfox said.

"Now, there is a photo circulating of Bigfoot with Ronald McDonald going to McDonald's in Jay to get something to eat," he said.

The sheriff said he assumed the Bigfoot sighting was a prank and never sent a deputy to Kenwood to investigate.

Blackfox wanted to let the boys know that pranks are serious and that he had to spend time away from county business to take calls from nervous residents.

"I attempted to talk to the boys, but they weren't at home," he said.

Another authoritative voice confirmed Blackfox's conclusion.

"We heard about the Kenwood rumors and sent one of our investigators, who confirmed it was a hoax," said D.W. Lee, the Mid-America Bigfoot Research Center's executive director.

Lee said his investigator identified the cell-phone photograph as one from the Patterson-Gimlin footage taken in California. The audio recording is a recorded howl out of Ohio. Both the photograph and audio clip are downloaded from the Internet.

Lee said the organization gets about 10 telephone calls a month. They are evenly divided among legitimate, misidentifications and hoaxes, he said.

The organization is currently working 25 active investigations of Bigfoot sightings in Oklahoma, he said.

"When we do expose a hoax, it shows the credibility of our organization," Lee said.

Lee is quick not to discount the Bigfoot sightings in northeastern Oklahoma.

"About four weeks ago, there was a Bigfoot sighting witnessed by 12 people," Lee said.

Lee would only say the hairy creature was spotted in southern Adair County by one of his research groups on an overnight trip. He estimated the creature to be between 7 and 8 feet tall.

"He stepped out of water and stood behind a tree," Lee said. "We turned off the spotlight, and he disappeared through the river reeds."

For more information, go to Mid-America Bigfoot's Web site, tulsaworld.com/midamericabigfoot .

By SHEILA STOGSDILL World Correspondent

http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=11&articleid=20100406_12_A12_JAYmda943138

Monday, April 12, 2010

Stuffed animals to be sold at auction

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/7578476/Stuffed-animals-to-be-sold-at-auction.html

Stuffed animals to be sold at auction
Published: 9:54AM BST 11 Apr 2010

A collection of bizarre stuffed animals including a unicorn, flying cat, yeti, and other curious creatures purportedly discovered by a Victorian adventurer are to be sold at auction. The fictional menagerie of deceased critters also boasts an extended sausage dog, furry fish, mermaid and a bizarre bat-like winged beast with webbed feet.

They formed part of a museum of taxidermy that has closed and now are to go under the hammer. They were billed in the 19th century as having been brought to the UK by fictional adventurer Professor Copperthwaite.

Some Victorians might even have believed these impossible creatures existed because some, like the Siamese sheep, were real.Others such as the Jackalope - a nearly extinct antlered species of rabbit "found almost exclusively on the high plains of Wyoming" - were not. The mermaid was said to have been purchased from a man in Calcutta from a Japanese sailor and the unicorn is labelled "Monoceros unicornis.

"And the "cheasant" or "phicken" was said to be a cross between a domestic fowl and ornamental pheasant. The 7ft yeti was given the authoritative-sounding name of Yeti Gigantes Abomanalis, or abominable snowman. This example was said to have been discovered entombed in a crevasse in which he had fallen on Nehru, close to the border with Azerbaijan.

The museum on the Isle of Wight where the stuffed creatures were exhibited was called the Brading Experience and has closed due to lack of visitors. Rupert Perry-Warnes, from Duke's auction house in Dorchester, is selling the bizarre creatures at a sale on April 13 along with more normal stuffed animals. He said: "We are selling the animals without reserves and they must all go. We have real animals in the sale but also these peculiar fictional ones.

"They were said to have been discovered by a Professor Copperthwaite and during the 19th century people might well have believed them.

"There is a two headed sheep and a Siamese sheep which were real, so the others might not have looked too out of place.

"They are well put together so you can understand why people might have been fooled.

"They were items that Victorians could have boasted about owning because no one else would have had such things.

"All the animals must be sold, so there are no reserves. The strange webb-footed creature we estimate at up to 500 pounds, but we just don't know about the others."

Auction catalogue - http://www.dukes-auctions.com/Catalogues/pf130410/index.html

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Winning picture disqualified from Wildlife Photographer of the year contest and pulled from Moors Valley exhibition

12:30pm Saturday 23rd January 2010

By Nick Churchill

CONTROVERSY has dogged the Wildlife Photographer of the Year contest and just two days before the competition exhibition was due to be unveiled at Moors Valley Country Park near Ringwood, the winning entry has been disqualified.

The picture, entitled the Storybook Wolf, by Spanish photographer Jose Luis Rodriguez, prompted a long-running debate as to whether it featured a wild wolf as the photographer claimed or a trained animal.

The photographer denies the wolf is a model wolf.

The competition organisers, however, effectively ended the argument on Wednesday by disqualifying the photograph, which will not now be included in the Moors Valley exhibition, which runs until February 28.

The judges have also decided there will not now be an overall winner.

In a statement, Louise Emerson, from the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition office, said: “It saddens us to confirm that after a careful and thorough investigation into the image the Storybook Wolf, the co-owners of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition, the Natural History Museum and BBC Wildlife Magazine, have disqualified the winning entry of the photographer José Luis Rodríguez.

“The judging panel was reconvened and concluded that it was likely that the wolf featured in the image was an animal model that can be hired for photographic purposes and, as a result, that the image had been entered in breach of Rule 10 of the competition.”

The photographer, however, strongly denies that the wolf is a model.

• Because the disqualification was only announced on Wednesday, after Saturday's Daily Echo Magazine went to press, the photograph appears in a feature about the exhibition.

The article includes more stunning images which were entered in the competition, including the Highly Commended Terns in a Dive Queue by Winchester photographer Paul Sansome plus more details about the exhibition at Moors Valley.

See a selection of our favourite pictures from the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition here.

http://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/4867972.Winning_picture_disqualified_from_Wildlife_Photographer_of_the_Year_competition/
(Submitted by Mark North)

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Bigfoot shows up in Bulgaria

21 January 2010
Jadyn Cassidy

It seems that Bigfoot or Yeti is alive and well and living in the Eastern European nation of Bulgaria, according to some cryptozoology fans in that country.

Currently the possibility that Bigfoot might live in their nation is inspiring the imagination of Bulgaria's media, however the story goes much further back.

Apparently twenty five years ago a local took photos of footsteps imprinted in the ground in the remote Rhodope Mountains. The footprints were said to be neither that of a human or a bear but some unknown hominid.

The pictures (above) were given over to a Russian institute for further study and declared a mystery. Nothing more was heard of the story.

Recently a hiker in the Rhodope Mountains came forward and reported seeing a strange ape-like creature. Locals apparently were not surprised and claimed to have been aware of this creature's existence for generations.

Allegedly locals had been singing a nursery rhyme for as long as anyone could remember that mentioned 'the Bear-Man that lives in the deep dark valleys'.

http://www.allnewsweb.com/page1199999299.php
(Submitted by Caty Bergman)

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

NH Artist Protests Halt To Bigfoot Project

Jan. 06, 2010

New Hampshire Artist Behind Bigfoot Art Project Says Park Ranger Trampled On His Rights

(AP) JAFFREY, N.H. (AP) - A New Hampshire artist and videographer who dressed as Bigfoot in a state park says his rights were trampled by big government.

Jonathan Doyle, of Keene, has complained in a letter to the state parks department that a Mount Monadnock park ranger halted his performance art project in the fall because he didn't have a permit.

Doyle is arguing through the New Hampshire Civil Liberties Union Foundation that his free-speech rights were violated when he was expelled from the state park in Jaffrey. He says he and others with him, some also in costume, were on a lesser-used trail and weren't bothering other park visitors.

Doyle says the state hasn't responded to his letter. The Division of Parks and Recreation says it has been forwarded to the state attorney general's office.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/01/05/ap/strange/main6060393.shtml
(Submitted by Dave McMann)

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Experts Cry Wolf Over 'Faked' Wildlife Pic

1:18pm UK, Tuesday December 22, 2009
Lewis Dean, Sky News Online

An award winning wildlife photo which scooped the year's most prestigious award and a cheque for £10,000 is being reviewed by judges after claims it was faked.

Spanish artist Jose Luis Rodriguez's image, called Storybook Wolf, is said to have broken rules by using a tame wolf rather than a wild one.

The rules of the competition, which attracted more than 43,000 entries, state that images of captive animals must be declared and that judges will give preference to images taken in "free and wild conditions".

Judges of the Veolia Environment Wildlife Photographer Of The Year competition are investigating claims the wolf pictured is actually one from a zoo near Madrid.

The Natural History Museum, which runs the competition with BBC Wildlife Magazine, said: "We are investigating this thoroughly with the Judging Panel and will report back in the New Year once our investigations are completed."

Mr Rodriguez strongly denies any wrongdoing or breach of the competition rules.

Suspicions were raised when wolf experts said that a wild animal would probably squeeze through the bars of the gate rather than jump over it.

Mr Rodriguez had told judges it took a long time to find the location let alone a wolf that would jump over the gate.

If found to have manufactured the photo Mr Rodriguez would be stripped of the prize.

http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Award-Winning-Spanish-Artist-Jose-Luis-Rodriguez-Accused-Of-Faking-Wildlife-Photo-Of-Jumping-Wolf/Article/200912415506480?lpos=UK_News_Second_UK_News_Article_Teaser_Region_1&lid=ARTICLE_15506480_Award_Winning_Spanish_Artist_Jose_Luis_Rodriguez_Accused_Of_Faking_Wildlife_Photo_Of_Jumping_Wolf

(Submitted by Steve Puckett)