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This is a list of cryptids (from the Greek κρύπτω, krypto, meaning "hide" or "hidden") notable within cryptozoology, a pseudoscience that presumes the existence of animals and plants that have been derived from anecdotal or other evidence considered insufficient by mainstream science. While biologists regularly identify new species, cryptozoologists focus on entities mentioned in the folklore record (the academic study of which is folkloristics). Well-known examples of cryptids include the Yeti in the Himalayas, the Loch Ness Monster in Scotland, and Bigfoot in North America.
Definition
Cryptozoologists may consider any figure from folklore to be a "cryptid" (from the Greek κρύπτω, krypto, meaning "hide") after the term cryptozoology and meaning a 'hidden animal'. The Oxford English Dictionary defines the noun cryptid as "an animal whose existence or survival to the present day is disputed or unsubstantiated; any animal of interest to a cryptozoologist".[1] Some dictionaries and encyclopedias define the term "cryptid" as an animal whose existence is questionable.[2][3] While used by most cryptozoologists, the term 'cryptid' is not used by academic zoologists.[4]
While there have been attempts to codify cryptozoology approaches, unlike biologists, zoologists, botanists, and other academic disciplines, however, "there are no accepted, uniform, or successful methods for pursuing cryptids".[5] According to anthropologist Jeb J. Card, cryptozoologists frame "[m]ost cryptids as the subject of indigenous legends typically collected in the hayday of comparative folklore, though such legends may be heavily modified or worse. Cryptozoology's complicated mix of sympathy, interest, and appropriation of indigenous culture (or non-indigenous construction of it) is also found in New Age circles and dubious 'Indian burial grounds' and other legends ... invoked in hauntings such as the "Amityville" hoax ...".[6]
Eberhart's classification
Cryptozoologist George M. Eberhart classifies ten types of mystery animals under the cryptozoological umbrella:[7][8]
- Distribution anomalies, known animals reported outside their normal range (e.g. the anomalous big cats of the U.K.);
- Undescribed, unusual, or outsized variations of known species (e.g. the giant anacondas reported from Amazonia or the spotted lions of East Africa);
- Survivals of recently extinct species (e.g. the ivory-billed woodpecker presumed extinct c. 1960, the Tasmanian tiger (thylacine), declared extinct in 1936, or the Steller's sea cow presumed extinct c. 1768, all of which are occasionally claimed to have survived to the present);
- Survivals of species known only from the fossil record into modern times (e.g. the mokele-mbembe of central Africa, sometimes described as a living dinosaur);
- Lingerlings, or survivals of species known from the fossil record much later into historical times than currently thought (e.g. the woolly mammoth, presumed extinct c. 12,000 BCE but occasionally purported to have survived into later eras);
- Animals not known from the fossil record but related to known species (e.g. the Andean wolf or the striped manta-ray reported by William Beebe in the 1930s);
- Animals not known from the fossil record nor related to any known species (e.g. North America's Bigfoot or most sea serpents);
- Mythical animals with a zoological basis;
- Seemingly paranormal or supernatural entities with some animal-like characteristics (e.g. Mothman, black dogs, or some fairies from folklore);
- Known hoaxes or probable misidentifications (e.g. the jackalope, an antlered rabbit, a popular hoax in taxidermy).
Additionally, Eberhart argues for six exclusions from classification as a cryptid:
- Insignificance. "Cryptids must be big, weird, dangerous or significant to humans in some way."
- Lack of controversy. "Someone needs to observe a mystery animal and someone else needs to discredit the sighting. Cryptozoologists function as interventionists between witnesses and skeptical scientists."
- Erratics. "The out-of-place alligator […] that turns up in an odd spot, undoubtedly through human agency, is not a zoological mystery […] [I]f someone discovers a new species of alligator that lives only in sewers, that is a different matter."
- Bizarre humans (e.g. zombies or vampires)
- Angels or demons […] "the paranormal or supernatural is admitted only if it has an animal shape (a werewolf sighting, which might involve a real dog or wolf, or a mystery canid)."
- Aliens "[unless such extraterrestrials] arrived a long time ago and thus classify as residents."
List
Animals
Aquatic or semi-aquatic
Name | Other names | Description | Purported location | Depiction |
---|---|---|---|---|
Altamaha-ha | Altie | Sturgeon or plesiosaur-like river animal | Georgia, United States | File:Altamaha-ha.jpg |
Ayia Napa sea monster | To filiko teras (The Friendly Monster), Nappis | Speculated to be something like a crocodile or sea serpent | Cyprus | |
Bear Lake Monster | Lake monster | Idaho/Utah, United States | ||
Bessie | Lake Erie Monster | Lake monster | Lake Erie, North America | |
Bownessie | Lake Windermere Monster | Lake monster | Windermere, England, UK | |
Brosno Dragon | Brosnya | Lake monster | Lake Brosno, Russia | |
Bunyip | Lake and cave animal | Australia | ||
Buru | Reptile or giant lungfish | Arunachal Pradesh, India | ||
Cadborosaurus[9] | Caddy | Sea animal | Pacific Coast of North America | |
Canvey Island Monster | Fish, originally described as bipedal | England | ||
Champ | Champtanystropheus americanus, Champy | Lake monster | Lake Champlain, North America | |
Chessie | Sea animal | Atlantic Coast of the United States, especially Chesapeake Bay | ||
Dingonek | Jungle walrus | A walrus or otherwise tusked water-animal that reportedly lives in the heart of Africa | Western Africa | |
Dewey Lake Monster | "Michigan Bigfoot," "Sisters Lakes Bigfoot" | Primate | Sister Lakes, Dowagiac, Michigan, USA | |
Dobhar-chú | Water Hound | Extra-large otter-like carnivorous aquatic mammal | Ireland | |
Flying rod | Skyfish, rod, sky squid | Photographic artifact | Worldwide | |
Gambo | Sea animal | Gambia | ||
Giant anaconda | Megaconda | Giant snake | South America | |
Giglioli's Whale | Amphiptera pacifica | Sea animal | Off Chile, Scotland, and France (in the Mediterranean Sea) | |
Globster | Blob | Decaying sea animal | Australia, New Zealand, and the Caribbean | |
Gloucester sea serpent | Scoliophis atlanticus | Sea serpent | Massachusetts, United States | |
Honey Island Swamp monster | Letiche, Tainted Keitre | Hominid or other primate | Louisiana, United States | |
Igopogo | Kempenfelt Kelly | Lake monster | Lake Simcoe, Ontario (Canada) | |
Iliamna Lake Monster | Lake monster. It is most likely a giant white sturgeon, though some reports have compared it to a shark or a whale | Lake Iliamna, Alaska | ||
Inkanyamba | Lake monster | Africa | ||
Isshii | Issie | Lake monster | Japan | |
Kraken | Sea animal | World's oceans | ||
Kusshii | Lake monster | Japan | ||
Lagarfljót Worm | lagarfljóts ormurinn | Lake monster | Iceland | |
Lake Tianchi Monster | Lake Chonji Monster | Lake monster | China and North Korea | |
Lake Van Monster | Monster of Lake Van | Lake monster | Turkey | |
Lariosauro | Como Lake Monster | Water reptile | Italy | |
Loch Ness Monster[10] | Nessie, Nessiteras rhombopteryx | Lake monster | Loch Ness, Scotland | |
Loveland Frog | Loveland Lizard | Bipedal lizard or frog, allegedly first seen in Loveland, Ohio | Ohio, United States | |
Lukwata | Lake monster | African Great Lakes | ||
Lusca | Gigantic octopus | Large octopus | World's oceans | |
Mahamba | Giant crocodile | Lake Tele swamp region, Democratic Republic of the Congo | ||
Mamlambo | Lake monster | South Africa | ||
Manatee of Helena | Manatee | Saint Helena | ||
Manipogo | Winnipogo | Lake monster | Lake Manitoba, Canada | |
Modern megalodon or giant predatory sharks | Carcharodon megalodon, Carcharocles megalodon | Giant shark[9][11][12] | World's oceans | |
Memphre | Memphré, Lake Memphremagog Monster | Lake monster | Lake Memphremagog (United States and Canada) | |
Mermaid | Human-fish | All five oceans and several seas | ||
Merman | Human-fish | All five oceans and several seas | ||
Mokele-Mbembe | Reptile/dinosaur | Republic of the Congo | ||
Morag | Lake monster | Scotland | ||
Morgawr | Sea Serpert | Cornwall | ||
Muckie | Lake monster | Lakes of Killarney, Ireland | ||
Muc-sheilche | Lake monster | Scotland | ||
Mussie | Lake monster | Ontario, Canada | ||
Nahuelito | Nahuel Huapi Lake Monster | Lake monster | Nahuel Huapi Lake, Argentina | File:Nahuelito.jpg |
Ogopogo | N'ha•a•itk, Naitaka | Lake monster | Lake Okanagan, Canada | |
Phaya Naga | River monster | Laos and Thailand | ||
Reptilians | Lizard People, Draconian, Reptoid, Dinosauroid, Dragonoid | Bipedal | Worldwide | |
Sea monk | Sea animal | World's oceans | ||
Sea monsters | Sea animals | World's oceans | ||
Sea serpent | Sea animal | World's oceans | ||
Selma | Seljordsormen | Lake monster | Lake Seljord, Telemark, Norway | |
Sharlie | Slimy Slim, The twilight dragon of Payette lake | Lake monster | Lake Payette, McCall, Idaho, United States | |
Shōjō | Xing-xing, translates to "heavy drinker" or "orangutan" | Sea creature with red face and hair | Japan | |
Snallygaster | Schneller Geist | "A dragon-like beast... The earliest incarnations mixed the half-bird features of a siren with the nightmarish features of demons and ghouls. The Snallygaster was described as half-reptile, half-bird with a metallic beak lined with razor-sharp teeth, occasionally with octopus-like tentacles." | The hills surrounding Washington D.C., Frederick County, Maryland, and West Virginia | |
Steller's sea ape | Sea animal | Pacific Ocean | ||
Storsjöodjuret | Lake monster | Sweden | ||
Stronsay Beast | Sea animal | Orkney, Scotland | ||
Sucuriju Gigante | Giant Bull Eater (Template:Lang-es); giant anaconda; megaconda | Giant boa | Amazon rainforest | |
Tahoe Tessie | Lake Tahoe monster | Lake monster | Lake Tahoe, in California and Nevada, United States | |
Thetis Lake Monster | Reptilian humanoid | Vancouver Island, Canada | ||
Trinity Alps giant salamander | Giant salamander[9][13] | California, United States | ||
Trunko | The Margate monster | Whale carcass | South Africa | |
Turtle Lake Monster | Lake monster | Saskatchewan, Canada | ||
Waitoreke | Maori otter, New Zealand otter; Waitoreki, Waitorete | Carnivorous mammal | South Island, New Zealand | |
Tapire-iauara | Jaguar/tapir | Amazon rainforest |
Terrestrial
Name | Other names | Description | Purported location | Depiction |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adjule | Kelb-el-khela | Unrecognized canine from the western part of the Sahara by local people, said to live in packs | North Africa | |
Agogwe | Agogure, Kakundakari, Kikomba, Sehite | Small human-shaped bipedal | East Africa | |
Akkorokamui | Cephalopod | Japan and Thailand | ||
Almas | Abnauayu, almasty, albasty, bekk-bok, biabin-guli, golub-yavan, gul-biavan, auli-avan, kaptar, kra-dhun, ksy-giik, ksy-gyik, ochokochi, mirygdy, mulen, voita, wind-man, Zana |
Non-human ape or hominid | Asia/Caucasus | |
Amomongo | Negros Ape | Primate | Negros Island, Philippines | |
Andean wolf | Hagenbeck wolf, Andean mountain wolf, Dasycyon hagenbecki | Canine | High Andes, South America | |
Barmanou | Barmanu, Big Hairy One | Ape or hominid | Middle East/Asia | |
Batutut | Ujit, Người rừng | Hominid | Vietnam, Laos, and Borneo | |
Beaman | Ape or hominid | Missouri, United States | ||
Beast of Bladenboro | Vampire Beast | Blood-sucking feline-like predator | North Carolina, United States | |
Beast of Bodmin | Large felid | Cornwall, England | ||
Beast of Bray Road | Wisconsin Werewolf, Wolfman | Carnivorous mammal | Wisconsin, United States | |
Beast of Dartmoor | Lion-pig | Boar and lion-like mammal | Dartmoor National Park, England | |
Beast of Dean | Moose-pig | Boar and moose-like mammal | England | |
Beast of Exmoor | Big cat | England | ||
Beast of Gévaudan | Bête du Gévaudan, Arenotelicon | Canid | Gévaudan (Lozère), France | |
Bergman's bear | God bear, irkuiem, Ursus arctos piscator | Bear, proposed Arctodus simus | Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia | |
Bigfoot | Sasquatch | Hominid or other primate | United States and Canada | |
Black Shuck | Old Shuck | Black dog (ghost) | Coast of East Anglia, England | |
British big cats | Alien big cats (ABCs), phantom cats, mystery cats, English lions, Beast of Bodmin, Beast of Exmoor |
Carnivorous mammal | Great Britain | |
Bukit Timah Monkey Man | BTM, BTMM | Forest-dwelling hominid or other primate | Singapore | |
Burmese gray wild dog | Gray dhole | Canine | Burma | |
Chuchunya | Large hominid | Russia | ||
Chupacabra | Chupacabras (Brazilian Portuguese for goat-sucker) | Puerto Rico (originally), South and Central America, Southern North America |
||
De Loys' Ape | Ameranthropoides loysi | Primate | Near the Tarra River, Colombia | |
Dover Demon | Bipedal |Dover, Massachusetts, United States | |||
Eastern cougar | Puma concolor couguar | Felid predator | Eastern United States | |
Ebu Gogo | Small primate, possible early hominid | Flores, Indonesia | ||
Elwetritsch[14] | Mammal | Germany | ||
Enfield Monster | Three legs, short body, two little short arms with claws, grayish epidermis and big reddish eyes | Enfield, Illinois, United States | ||
Ennedi tiger | Hadjel, Gassingram, Vossoko, Mourou N'gou, Mamaimé, Dilali, saber-toothed cat | Carnivorous mammal | Chad | |
Am Fear Liath Mòr | Fear Liath, Big Grey Man of Ben MacDhui, Greyman | Primate; possible humanoid | Scotland | |
Fiskerton Phantom | Phantom cat/bear | Fiskerton, Lincolnshire, UK | ||
Fouke Monster | Jonesville Monster, Southern Sasquatch, Boggy Creek Monster | Hominid or other primate | Arkansas, United States | |
Garou | Loup Garou, Cajun werewolf | Wolf-like creature | Louisiana, United States | |
Gazeka | Mammal | Papua New Guinea | ||
Gambo | Sea animal | Gambia | ||
Ghost deer | Large deer, supposedly impervious to bullets | Northern California, United States | ||
Goatman | The Maryland Goatman, Chevo Man | Bipedal | Wisconsin, Maryland, and Kentucky, United States | |
Grassman | Kenmore Grassman, Ohio Grassman | Bigfoot-like primate | Kenmore, Akron, Ohio, and eastern Iowa, both in the United States | |
Hellhound | Barghest, Black Shuck, Dip, Gwyllgi, Gytrash | Large, black, spectral hound with red eyes | Worldwide | |
Hibagon | Hinagon | Primate | Japan | |
Hodag | The Dag; Nasobatilus | Carnivorous mammal/lizard | Rhinelander, Wisconsin, United States | |
Homo gardarensis | Hominid (acromegalic Homo sapiens?) | Greenland | ||
Honey Island Swamp monster | Letiche, Tainted Keitre | Hominid or other primate | Louisiana, United States | |
Hoop snake | Snake | United States/Australia | ||
Huay Chivo | Huaychivo | Carnivorous mammal | Yucatán, Campeche, and Quintana Roo, Mexico | |
Jba Fofi | Great Spider | Large spider-like creature | Central Africa | |
Jackalope | Antelabbit, aunt benny, Wyoming thistled hare, stagbunny | Herbivorous mammal | North America | |
Koolakamba | Ape hybrid, KoolooKamba | A cross between a chimpanzee and a gorilla | West Africa | |
Kting Voar | Holy Goat, Snake-eating Cow, Khting Vor, Linh Duong, Pseudonovibos spiralis | Herbivorous mammal | Vietnam and Cambodia | |
Kumi Lizard/Ngarara | Reptile: giant monitor lizard | New Zealand | ||
Lake Worth Monster | Lake Worth Goatman, Texas Bigfoot | Carnivorous mammal | Texas, United States | |
Lizard Man of Scape Ore Swamp | Lizard Man of Lee County | Bipedal | South Carolina, United States | |
MacFarlane's bear | Ursus inopinatus | Carnivorous mammal, possibly a grizzly-polar bear hybrid | Canada | |
Maero | Mohoao | Cannibalistic hominids in Māori mythology | New Zealand | |
Maltese tiger | Blue tiger | Carnivorous mammal | China | |
Mapinguari | Herbivorous mammal | Amazon rainforest | ||
Maricoxi | Primate | South America | ||
Marozi | Spotted lion, Panthera leo maculatus[15] | Lion-like felid, possibly a leopon (lion-leopard hybrid) | Africa | |
Melon heads | Humanoids with enlarged heads | Allegan County woods, Michigan, and parts of Ohio and Connecticut, United States | ||
Menehune | Primate | Hawaii, United States | ||
Michigan Dogman | Wolfman of Wexford County | Carnivorous mammal | Michigan, United States | |
Minhocão | Big Earthworm | Caecilian | South America | |
Milton lizard | Giant monitor lizard-like lizard | Trimble County, Kentucky | ||
Minnesota Iceman | Homo pongoides | Primate | Minnesota, United States | |
Mitla | Fawcett's zorro or Fawcett's cat | Carnivorous mammal | Bolivian rainforest | |
Mngwa | Nunda | Carnivorous mammal | Tanzania | |
Moehau | Maeroero, The Hairy Moehau, The Moehau Monster | Primate | New Zealand | |
Mogollon Monster | Mug-ee-yun Monster | Bipedal primate | Mogollon Rim, Arizona, United States | |
Momo the Monster | Missouri Monster | Primate | Missouri, United States | |
Mongolian death worm | Allghoi (or orghoi) khorkhoi | Worm-like animal | Gobi Desert (Asia) | |
Monkey-man of Delhi | Black Monkey | Big black monkey | Old Delhi, India | |
Mono Grande | Hominid | South America | ||
Montauk Monster | Mounty | Small, decomposed quadruped carcass | Montauk, Long Island, United States | |
Mountain fennec | Fox | Southern Algeria and northern Chad, in the central Sahara mountains | ||
Nandi Bear | Chemosit, Chimiset, Chimisit, Duba, Engargiya, Gadett, Ikimizi, Kerit, Kikambangwe, Kikomba, Koddoelo, Ngoloko, Sabrookoo, Shivuverre | Carnivorous mammal | Africa | File:Nandibear.jpg |
Old Yellow Top | Primate | Canada | ||
Onza | Big felid: possibly a cougar | Latin America | ||
Orang-bati | Bipedal | Indonesia | ||
Orang Mawas | Mawas, Orang Dalam, Hantu Jarang Gigi | Primate | Malaysia | |
Orang Pendek | Primate, has been associated with Homo floresiensis | Sumatra | ||
Ozark Howler | Ozark Black Howler | Carnivorous mammal | Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas, United States | |
Panthera tigris sudanensis | Big felid or tiger, possibly a mistaken Caspian tiger (formerly Panthera tigris virgata, currently Panthera tigris tigris)[16] whose skin was imported to Africa.[17] | Cairo, Egypt | ||
Peluda | Shaggy Beast, La Velue | A dragon-like beast with a porcupine-like body, a snake's neck, head, and tail, large tortoise-like feet, and a green color | La Ferté-Bernard, France | |
Phantom cat | Alien Big Cats (ABCs) | Carnivorous mammal | Worldwide | |
Phantom kangaroo | Marsupial | Various | ||
Pogeyan[18] | Gray felid; possible color morph of the Indian leopard | Area of Anamudi, Western Ghats, India | ||
Pope Lick Monster | Bipedal | Kentucky, United States | ||
Queensland tiger | Yarri, the Beast of Buderim | Carnivorous mammal | Australia | |
Shug Monkey | Primate | Europe | ||
Shunka Warakin | Carnivorous mammal; wolf-like, boar-like, hyena-like | Western United States (especially Montana) | ||
Sigbin | Canine, cat-fox, civet | Philippines | ||
Sirrush | Mushrushu | Reptile/dinosaur | Africa and ancient Babylon | |
Skookum | Cannibalistic wildmen of Mount St. Helens, Washington State | Ape-like hominid | Pacific Northwest | |
Skunk Ape | Stink Ape, Myakka Ape, Myakka Skunk Ape | Primate | Florida, United States | |
Tatzelwurm | Reptile/amphibian | European Alps | ||
Tsuchinoko | Snake | Japan | ||
Tsul 'Kalu | Primate | American West | ||
Urayuli | Arulataq, Bushman, Tent Monster, Nant'ina, Woodsman | Hominid or other primate | Southwest Alaska, near Lake Iliamna, United States | |
Veo[19] | An anteater-like creature that eats insects | Indonesia | ||
Waheela | Carnivorous mammal | Canada | ||
Waitoreke | Maori otter, New Zealand otter; Waitoreki, Waitorete | Carnivorous mammal | South Island, New Zealand | |
Wampus cat | Foot Craver, Masked Cat, Canable Cat | Legendary felid | Southern and Southwestern United States | |
Wendigo | Windiga, Witiko, Wihtikow, Weendigo | Legendary creature | Northern United States and Canada | |
Wild Man of the Navidad | Wild Woman of the Navidad, Wildman of the Navidad | Legendary creature | South Texas, United States | |
Wolpertinger | Crisensus bavaricus | Mammal | Germany | |
Yeren | Yiren, Yeh Ren, Chinese Wildman | Primate (possible hominin) | China | |
Yeti | Abominable Snowman | Primate / Ursidae | Himalayas (Asia) | |
Yowie | Yahoo | Primate | Australia |
Winged
Name | Other names | Description | Purported location | Depiction |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chickcharney | Flightless bird | Andros Island in The Bahamas | ||
Devil Bird | Ulama | Bird | Sri Lanka | |
Hakawai | Hokioi | Mythological bird heard but not seen | New Zealand | |
Ivory-billed woodpecker | Campephilus principalis | Sightings of species presumed extinct. | Southeastern United States and Cuba | |
Jersey Devil[10] | Leeds Devil | Winged bipedal horse | United States, mainly the South Jersey Pine Barrens, as well as other parts of New Jersey and southeastern Pennsylvania | |
Kongamato | Pterosaur/bird/bat | Kenya | ||
Mothman | Popularized by John A. Keel's book The Mothman Prophecies | Winged bipedal | Mason County, West Virginia, United States | |
Olitiau | Winged animal: bat or flying reptile | Cameroon | ||
Owlman | Cornish Owlman, Owlman of Mawnan | Human-owl | England | |
Poukai | Pouakai, Hakawai | Large carnivorous bird | New Zealand | |
Thunderbird | Giant bird | North America | File:Thunderbird (artistic rendition).jpg |
Plants
Name | Other names | Description | Purported location | Depiction |
---|---|---|---|---|
Umdhlebi | Poisonous tree | Zululand, South Africa | ||
Man-eating trees[20][21][22] | Madagascar tree, Nubian tree, Yateveo, Vampire vine | Carnivorous tree | Africa and Central America |
See also
- Animalia Paradoxa
- Crypsis
- Cryptozoology
- Legendary creature
- List of cryptozoologists
- List of legendary creatures
- List of megafauna discovered in modern times
- List of urban legends
References
- ^ "cryptid, n." OED Online. Oxford University Press, September 2016. Web. 25 October 2016.
- ^ "The Oxford Dictionary". Retrieved 17 June 2016.
- ^ "Canadian Encyclopedia". Retrieved 17 June 2016.
- ^ Paxton, C. G. M. (2011), Putting the "ology" into cryptozoology, vol. 7, Biofortean Notes, pp. 7–20
- ^ Regal, Brian (2011) "Cryptozoology", pp. 326–329 as published in McCormick, Charlie T. and Kim Kennedy (2011). Folklore: An Encyclopedia of Beliefs, Customs, Tales, Music, and Art. 2nd edition. ABC-CLIO. {{ISBN|978-1-59884-241-8}.}
- ^ Card, Jeb J. 2016. "Steampunk Inquiry: A Comparative Vivisection of Discovery Pseudoscience" in Card, Jeb J. and Anderson, David S. Lost City, Found Pyramid: Understanding Alternative Archaeologies and Pseudoscientific Practices, p. 24-25. University of Alabama Press. ISBN 9780817319113
- ^ Eberhart, George M. (2005). "Mysterious Creatures: Creating A Cryptozoological Encyclopedia" (PDF). Journal of Scientific Exploration. 19 (1): 103–113.
- ^ Jobling, Mark A. (2013). "The truth is out there". Investigative Genetics. 4 (24): 24. doi:10.1186/2041-2223-4-24. PMC 4121952. PMID 25097746.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ a b c Coleman, Loren; Clark, Jerome (7 May 2013). "Mapinguary". Cryptozoology A To Z: The Encyclopedia Of Loch Monsters Sasquatch Chupacabras And Other Authentic Mysteries of Nature. The United States of America: Simon & Schuster. p. 155. ISBN 1-4391-4779-5.
- ^ a b S.J. Velasquez (31 October 2015). "The monster you should never find". BBC Online. British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 11 August 2018.
- ^ Renz, Mark (2002). "4 (Then Again What If? What if Meg still exists?); Bibliography". Megalodon: Hunting the Hunter. Lehigh Acres: PaleoPress. pp. 44–164. ISBN 0-9719-4770-8.
- ^ Emmer, Rick (2010). "Megalodon The Fishermans Nightmare; Final Report Megalodon". Megalodon: Fact Or Fiction?. New York: Chelsea House Publishers. pp. 23–84. ISBN 1-4381-3210-7.
- ^ Fortean Times. John Brown Pub. 1997. p. 43.
- ^ "Cryptozoology, the study of hidden animals". Forbes. Retrieved 28 June 2018.
- ^ Shuker, Karl P. N. (1989). Mystery Cats of the World. Robert Hale. ISBN 978-0-7090-3706-4.
- ^ Kitchener, A. C.; Breitenmoser-Würsten, C.; Eizirik, E.; Gentry, A.; Werdelin, L.; Wilting, A.; Yamaguchi, N.; Abramov, A. V.; Christiansen, P.; Driscoll, C.; Duckworth, J. W.; Johnson, W.; Luo, S.-J.; Meijaard, E.; O’Donoghue, P.; Sanderson, J.; Seymour, K.; Bruford, M.; Groves, C.; Hoffmann, M.; Nowell, K.; Timmons, Z.; Tobe, S. (2017). "A revised taxonomy of the Felidae: The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group" (PDF). Cat News (Special Issue 11). ISSN 1027-2992.
- ^ Mazák, V. (1981). "Panthera tigris" (PDF). Mammalian Species. 152: 1–8. doi:10.2307/3504004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 March 2012.
{{cite journal}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Naish, D. "The Pogeyan, a new mystery cat". ScienceBlogs.com. Retrieved 19 January 2009.
- ^ "Veo entry: The Cryptopedia". The Cryptopedia: A Dictionary of the Weird, Strange & Downright Bizarre. Kensington Publishing Corp. 2007. p. 33. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
- ^ TIME-LIFE Mysteries of the Unknown: Inside the World of the Strange and Unexplained. Time Inc. Books. 15 December 2015. ISBN 9781618933003. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
- ^ McGrath, Timothy (19 October 2013). "The world's greatest imaginary animals". Salon. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
- ^ Shuker, Karl (12 June 2014). The Beasts That Hide from Man: Seeking the World's Last Undiscovered Animals. Cosimo, Inc. pp. 108–114. ISBN 9781616406219. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
Further reading
- Eberhart, George M. (2002). Mysterious Creatures: A Guide to Cryptozoology. Vol. Volume 2. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-57607-283-5.
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