Friday, May 31, 2019

Amateur Analysis - May 31st Collection

Detailed here is my own analysis of a set of prints which, over the course of several decades, have all been attributed to sasquatch, or at least, some unidentified primate species in North America. This collection involves 17 consecutive prints from 7 different cases. Two of these cases, unfortunately, were not readily examine-able -- this is due to a lack of detail in their respective photographs.

These cases hail from Nordegg, Oklahoma, North Carolina, New York, Oregon, and one undisclosed location. Further reading on these prints can be found in the linked document.

The image below is a spreadsheet and chart representing the data I believe can be examined, here. The spreadsheet's numbers and columns represent the names of the fingerprint patterns that we know to exist, and the amount of times signs of those patterns show up in the entire alleged fingerprint collection in the document.

Please keep in mind that I am still looking around for a firm who will take any of these cases and examine them properly; this is an amateur analysis on my own part. I am not a professional by any means, and my examinations could easily be wrong.

Hopefully, including the data and photographs will help to prevent error.
Case Document

~Karac St. Laurent

Thursday, May 30, 2019

The Sasquatch Print Project

Hello,

My name is Karac St. Laurent. I am, as of writing this post, 19 years old, and an aspiring young cryptozoologist.

I have been actively studying the sasquatch phenomenon for about a decade. It is my opinion that what people are seeing and collecting possible evidence of is a species of North American great ape that we have yet to properly document.

In an effort to further the documentation of this species, I have created the Sasquatch Print Project. The project will collect and analyze alleged fingerprints and toeprints attributed to the sasquatch. This will, hopefully, result in the building of a sort of dermal ridge profile for the species; which patterns come up the most often, how large do the fingers tend to be, what conditions are they best preserved in, etc.

If anyone reading this has some sort of alleged documentation of a sasquatch's dermal ridges, through a photograph or otherwise, please contact me at crash.course.cryptozoology@gmail.com.

~Karac St. Laurent