Bigfoot and yeti, as elusive as ever

Posted: Published on August 8th, 2014

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

Legends of mysterious part-human creatures have circulated for centuries, and those stories persist today in cultures around the world, from Yeti in the Himalayas to the Almas, or wild man, in Central Asia to Sasquatch, aka Bigfoot, in North America.

Now a research team has performed the first rigorous genetic analysis of three dozen hair samples that their collectors claimed came from such undiscovered, living humanoids.

Like everyone else, I was curious to know what was at the bottom of all of the rumors and myths, said Bryan Sykes, a professor of human genetics at the University of Oxford, who led the study.

The samples, it turned out, belonged to a range of creatures: raccoons, sheep, bears, dogs, humans and more. Bigfoot, however, was not one of them.

Sykes and his colleagues acquired 57 hair samples from museums and collectors in the Himalayas, Russia, the United States and Indonesia.

After excluding two non-hair samples, the team selected 36 of the remaining ones for analysis.

They thoroughly cleaned the hairs using forensic techniques and then sequenced mitochondrial DNA recovered from the hair shafts.

Thirty of the samples yielded genetic material, which they compared with listings in a genetic database of known species.

Nearly all of the samples, the team reports in The Proceedings of the Royal Society B, came from normal animals living in their known range with the exception of two from the Himalayas closely connected to an ancient species of polar bear.

New York Times Service

View post:
Bigfoot and yeti, as elusive as ever

Related Posts
This entry was posted in Human Genetics. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.