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cryptocase · 5 years
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Fallout gets me
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Explore the world of cryptids and the paranormal with these hard enamel pins!
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cryptocase · 5 years
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The Yeti has been a part of the Tibetan mythology for hundreds of years. The Western world didn’t discover it until the 19th century when the British began exploring the Himalayas. One of the first Yeti accounts is found in Lieutenant Colonel Laurence Austine Waddell’s book Among the Himalayas [1889]. Waddell describes how he observes strange footprints in the snow by the lake Sikkim, at 16400 feet above sea level. According to Waddell’s local guides, the footprints had been made by a large ape-like creature they call Mi-go.
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Cryptid of the Day: Lake Ontario Monster (Kingstie)
Description: Before European settlers came to the lake, Native Americans told of a giant horned serpent that lived in Lake Ontario. In 1829, two children reported seeing a 20-30 foot serpent swimming in the lake. Ever since, throughout the decades, people have reported seeing a serpent like creature in the lake.
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Featured artist Kristen Puckett makes learning about our favorite cryptids fun with her informative illustrations. For instance, did you know that the Appalachian Bigfoot, or Yahoo, is known for its terrifying scream? See more of Kristen in our art portal at https://www.singularfortean.com/pap-kristenpuckett.
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Slavic Bestiary by Lucas Staniec
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Mothman’s humble abode
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cryptocase · 5 years
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Old Yellow Top is a cryptid sighted several times around the town of Cobalt in Ontario, Canada. It is described as a seven-foot tall, bipedal hominid, with dark hair on its body and a striking blonde mane, which gives it its nickname.
Old Yellow Top was first spotted in 1906, the same year as Cobalt’s founding. Encounters were then reported for a further sixty-four years, with the last sighting coming in 1970, when a group of miners saw the creature cross the road in front of them.
Image source.
Monster master list.
Suggest a spook.
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Cryptid of the Day: Lake Khaiyr Monster
Description: In November of 1964, a Soviet research team saw a plesiosaur creature in Lake Khaiyr in Russia’s Sakha Republic. It was first seen by Nikolai Gladikh when he was collecting water from the lake, and a second time by the entire team while they were out on the lake.
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Classic Cryptids Print and Sticker Set from Brettisagirl
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cryptocase · 5 years
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My cryptid illustrations for Cryptid Tuesday!
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Report Your Cryptid Sighting
Have you ever had an experience with something you can’t explain? Have you ever had an encounter with a creature you have never seen before? If so, you may have unknowingly entered the world of Cryptozoology!
Let us share you experience with the world and hopefully get one step closer to solving your cryptid mystery!
Report your sighting
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Hoax (kind of) of the Day: Lake Lametrie Monster
Description: “The Monster of Lake Lametrie” was a short story published by Pearson’s Magazine in 1899 about two scientists who discover and kill a plesiosaur like creature in the fictional Lake Lametrie in Wyoming. Though the story was based on various lake monster sightings, the story itself is fictional. And yet, the monster constantly shows up on list of lake monsters published by top notch cryptozoologists.
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Cryptid Aesthetics [2/?]: Bigfoot/Sasquatch
Supposedly a simian-like creature that inhabits forests, the term “sasquatch” is an Anglicized derivative of the Halkomelem word “sásq'ets”.  “Wild men" stories found among the Pacific Northwest coastal Indian tribes can be confidently related to Bigfoot and correspond to the areas where white Americans have reported sightings.  Similar accounts and legends are found on every continent except Antarctica.
Individuals claiming to have seen Bigfoot describe it as a large, hairy, muscular, bipedal ape-like creature, roughly 6–9 feet tall, and covered in hair described as black, dark brown, or dark reddish.  Some descriptions include details such as large eyes, a pronounced brow ridge, and a large, low-set forehead.  The top of the head has been described as rounded and crested, similar to the sagittal crest of the male gorilla.  The creature has been reported as having a strong, unpleasant smell.
The enormous footprints for which the creature is named are claimed to be as large as 24 inches long and 8 inches wide.  Some footprint casts have also contained claw marks.
Proponents of Bigfoot’s existence claim that the creature is omnivorous and mainly nocturnal.
[X]
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cryptocase · 5 years
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The Incredible Aztec Calendar Stone, In The Old National Museum Of Mexico. (1917)
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cryptocase · 5 years
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Origins: Jersey Devil
The following version of the story of the Jersey Devil’s birth was one of the earliest versions printed, appearing in the Atlantic Monthly in 1859.
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There lived, in the year 1735, in the Township of Burlington, a woman. Her name was Leeds, and she was shrewdly suspected of a little amateur witchcraft.
Be that as it may, it is well established, that, one stormy gusty night, when the wind was howling in turret and tree, Mother Leeds gave birth to a son, whose father could have been no other than the Prince of Darkness.
No sooner did he see the light than he assumed the form of a fiend, with horse’s head, wings of a bat, and a serpent’s tail.
The first thought of the newborn Caliban (the deformed slave from Shakespeare’s Tempest) was to fall foul of his mother, whom he scratched and bepommelled soundly, and then flew through the window out into the village, where he played the mischief generally.
Little children he devoured, maidens he abused, young men he mauled and battered; and it was many days before a holy man succeeded in repeating the enchantment of Prospero (again, from Tempest).
At length, however, Leed’s devil was laid— but only for 100 years.
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