Dartmoor Beast Identified As New Species Of European Giant Hyrax?

Discussion in 'Pseudoscience Archive' started by common_sense_seeker, Jan 28, 2010.

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  1. common_sense_seeker Bicho Voador & Bicho Sugador Valued Senior Member

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  3. Enmos Valued Senior Member

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    It's a freakin' dog!
     
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  5. AlphaNumeric Fully ionized Registered Senior Member

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    It's a dog, a bloody dog! Seriously, this is so obviously a dog its stupid to claim otherwise. And it definitely doesn't look like the other animal you link to.

    Once again CCS you demonstrate you have no common sense!
     
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  7. PsychoTropicPuppy Bittersweet life? Valued Senior Member

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  8. common_sense_seeker Bicho Voador & Bicho Sugador Valued Senior Member

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    No, the eye-witnesses who saw it moving said that it definitely WASN'T a dog. Some very intriguing photos of an unidentified ambling creature on Dartmoor

     
  9. PsychoTropicPuppy Bittersweet life? Valued Senior Member

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    Hmm...the link says that I have to register. ._.
     
  10. common_sense_seeker Bicho Voador & Bicho Sugador Valued Senior Member

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    Here's the Daily Mail article of same event Demon of Dartmoor: Mystery beast seen at hell hound's haunt.

     
  11. sifreak21 Valued Senior Member

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    roflcakes its a dog, looks nothing like whatever that huge rat/rabbit looking thing is
     
  12. common_sense_seeker Bicho Voador & Bicho Sugador Valued Senior Member

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    What? You don't reckon it's a dog? Short muzzle and small round ears, just like a hyrax..

    Even the Beast of Gevaudan is shown with small ears, lighter underside etc..and here's the biggest clue:

     
  13. phlogistician Banned Banned

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    It's a dog. I have three dogs, and some of my pics of them can look a bit odd at times too. At a guess, I would say the dog in question had some old English Sheepdog in it. Hence the coat. Common, you've been debunked yet again!
     
  14. AlphaNumeric Fully ionized Registered Senior Member

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    So he admits in some photos it looks like a dog so rather than reaching the logical conclusion of "It's a dog which is rather rough looking" he thinks "Its a bear which is rather scrawny looking".

    You ever seen a bear CSS? Looks nothing like that, the structure of the hips and legs are different. You'd definitely see it in a video as they move quite differently. It looks closer to a Hyrax than a bear but it still looks like a bloody dog!

    Think about it logically. In every place in the world where you have bears, wolves, wild dogs and in fact any animal and humans leave food out the animals invariably realise its easy to scavenge from bins than from a forest etc. They make themselves easier to find, not harder. If you bumped a wolf or bear into the British countryside it might hide from humans initially but it'll eventually become comfortable enough to come into populated area for food. Then its seen, caught and perhaps killed. They don't remain elusive!

    The whole "There's a beast of [name of place]!" nonsense requires you to believe animals will avoid a readily available supply of high energy food (ie human food) and deliberately avoid ALL contact or sighting of humans. In every place where humans and animals spend time near one another the animals get comfortable with people and have no problem trotting through built up areas. I once camped in Denali National Park in Alaska and despite there being only a few thousand people in an area 10% larger than Wales we still had a wild wolf walk through our camp site in daylight in front of about 8 of us.

    So unless you believe that for some inexplicable reason this 'beast' behaves differently from ALL documented behaviour of wild predators you can't seriously think such an animal exists.
     
  15. Enmos Valued Senior Member

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  16. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    That might well be a dog in the photo, but you have to realise that there really was a giant hyrax living on Dartmoor.
    Until the local yeti ate it.
     
  17. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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  18. phlogistician Banned Banned

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    Exactly right. I grew up in the countryside, surrounded on three sides of the house by farmland, which mostly was used for growing wheat. Never saw much wildlife at night.

    Now I live on the outskirts of a city, near a canal that runs from the centre of town, through a park, out to a nature reserve, and passes a McDonalds. I see foxes quite regularly. They use the towpath as a 'fox highway' linking all the great sources of food, from ducks and geese in the park and reserve, to abandoned food outside McDonalds and in the park bins, and often detouring around the houses (saw on on the corner by my place only a couple of weeks ago') to see what people have left out to be collected on 'bin day'.
     
  19. common_sense_seeker Bicho Voador & Bicho Sugador Valued Senior Member

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    You seem to forget that you weren't there were you? The eye-witness was a regular local who also has his own dogs all his life. He's seen big cats, and says that it wasn't the same. He says it didn't MOVE like a dog. How can people here claim to have a better opinion from only a photo, whilst this man saw the evidence in real life!? It's also VERY big, too big for a dog.

    Hyraxes on the other hand were prolific during the past, sometimes evolving to the size of a pony. This is the rotund stature of the herbivorous hyrax imo.
     
  20. Enmos Valued Senior Member

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    I know a dog when I see one. Besides, why do you trust that guys say-so?
    For all you know he's just making it up to get some attention, or maybe he's an idiot.
    Do you ever practice any critical thinking at all? Do you think it looks like a dog?

    Tell you what, if you can show that giant hyraxes exist in Dartmoor I will reconsider.
     
  21. common_sense_seeker Bicho Voador & Bicho Sugador Valued Senior Member

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    The head ISN'T that of a dog. Fact. The way it moved wasn't that of a dog. FACT.
     
  22. Enmos Valued Senior Member

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    Show me how exactly it isn't the head of a dog.

    So you have seen it move then? Evidence please!


    And whatever animal it is, it doesn't even remotely look like a hyrax.
    I'll ask you again. What animal does it resemble most in your opinion?
     
  23. common_sense_seeker Bicho Voador & Bicho Sugador Valued Senior Member

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    It's too big for a dog!

    1. Island gigantism can explain the large size. It would an advantage to look like a wolf from a distance and also be very large; it puts off potential predators. Hyraxes were widespread and more diverse in the past:


    (Also note that they are forbidden to be eaten in Jewish law, and so would achieve evolutionary advantage from non-human hunting in Isreal)
     
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