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Credibility of Modern Pterosaurs

How can intelligent people believe that pterosaurs, those “primitive” flying creatures called pterodactyls, might still be flying over our heads? How can anyone believe in something so incredible? A terse rejecting of all the possibilities of a modern species of “flying dinosaur,” however, is answered thus: How do you explain all the eyewitness testimonies?

Cryptozoology and Science

The following is taken from the short nonfiction e-book Live Pterosaurs in Australia and in Papua New Guinea, by me, Jonathan D. Whitcomb.

Common persons in the southwest Pacific have seen something big flying overhead, something uncommon, unlike any bird or bat.

My American associates and I have explored remote jungles in Papua New Guinea, searching for living pterosaurs and interviewing native eyewitnesses. Most expeditions were led by one or two Americans, with one or two native interpreters. Did we fail or succeed? It depends on who interprets our investigations: skeptics who point out the lack of an official scientific discovery or open-minded cryptozoologists who recognize progress and hope it will continue.

Cryptozoology is not a branch of science, at least not in the usual sense; but it can motivate zoologists to conduct field investigations, at least in theory it can motivate them. It is the “study of hidden animals,” and usually relies less on direct scientific examination and more on eyewitness testimony; nevertheless, we can use scientific reasoning and methods within the boundaries of cryptozoology.

The American missionary Thomas Savage, in the 1800’s in Africa, obtained some bones of what we now call a “Western Gorilla,” which prepared for its eventual scientific acknowledgement. Whatever led that missionary to obtain those bones can be called “cryptozoological,” especially if he had been following eyewitness accounts.

The following is taken from the introduction in my larger book, Searching for Ropens and Finding God (fourth edition):

Although I encountered no dragon during my brief stay on Umboi Island in 2004, eyewitnesses I did encounter, objective witnesses of the reality of the ropen, with no superstitious native traditions tainting testimonies, almost without exception. Islanders of Umboi see the ropen and report what they saw; why should they doubt their own senses? And why should we doubt natives? Human experience lives at the foundation of all human societies and at the foundation of science; why single out experiences of those of another society as unreliable? Defending traditions of our own culture may be the worst excuse for rejecting experiences of natives who have long been labeled “primitive.”

To elaborate on the foundation of science being human experience, what do most Americans and other Westerners mean by “scientific?” Some non-scientists use that word as if it referred to some huge collection of statements of fact. Some of them use scientific to dismiss any and all eyewitness accounts of anything that may suggest an extant pterosaur. In reality, Western science was born with eyes that could see and a mind that could reason on what it perceived. Galileo and other early European scientists worked on understanding what they experienced, including what they saw with their eyes. Imagination is important, but the greatest scientists accepted human experience as the great validator of what they imagined.

Dr. Donald Prothero the Paleontologist

A few weeks ago, an American paleontologist, Donald Prothero, wrote a blog post, “Fake Pterosaurs and Sock Puppets,” in which the word fossil was absent. Please note, paleontologists are experts in fossils; it’s hard to find a dictionary definition of paleontology without noticing the word fossil. That was a strange omission.

“Fake Pterosaurs and Sock Puppets” was that professor’s opinion about my integrity, in particular my honesty, for he used the word deception regarding my online publications. That smells of bulverism, if not outright libel. I suggest that the bad motivations on my part were only in his imagination and in what was imagined by a few previous writers that had influenced him.

Outside the comments at the bottom of Prothero’s post, the word eyewitness is absent. That was a strange omission, for I am a cryptozoologist, an investigator who specializes in eyewitness testimonies. Why did he neglect getting into any details about his specialty and about my specialty?

Dr. Prothero may be a highly acclaimed paleontologist in the United States, or perhaps around the world, in his areas of expertise with fossils. But he seems to have completely failed to research what was outside his area of education and scientific credentials: the narrow branch of cryptozoology involving reports of apparent living pterosaurs.

Credibility of Eyewitness Testimony

The statistics from 128 of the more-credible reports, compiled at the end of 2012, prove that no significant number of hoaxes could have been involved. Prothero says nothing about that in his post about me. He does not even hint that any analysis was ever done on any eyewitness reports.

Detailed study shows certain critical descriptions in reports from around the world, reports that I have received over the past eleven years from four continents. Prothero gives not even a hint that I have ever received any reports directly from eyewitnesses. He was concentrating on making it appear like the subject of modern pterosaurs is not worth thinking about because it is all “fake,” and practically all of the publications are from me, and I am not to be trusted because I acted improperly in the use of “sock puppets.”

I suggest that the truth is better known and understood by following the evidence, not by following dead-end trails of bulverism.

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American paleontologist “attacks” living pterosaurs

Readers of a recent post by Dr. Donald Prothero may think that I, Jonathan Whitcomb, have single-handedly deceived ignorant people into believing that pterosaurs are still alive. The paleontologist seems upset that my web pages dominate Google searches.

Clear Thinking and Donald Prothero

. . . using the word deception three times regarding me, Jonathan Whitcomb. . . . C. S. Lewis gave us “bulverism,” lamenting the decline of human reasoning. He defined the word in the mid-twentieth century: “The modern method is to assume without discussion that he [someone whose opinion you dislike] is wrong and then distract his attention from this (the only real issue) by busily explaining how he became so silly.” How much better to talk about the subject at hand!

Review of a pterosaur book

So here I am, a very convinced “Evolutionist” who has written a great deal on Darwin, Chambers, Russel Wallace etc reading a  book on Live Pterosaur sightings by an out loud and proud Creationist.  And you know what? It really makes no difference to the case. So Whitcomb believes in living pterosaurs? The sceptics who attack his research are equally convinced they are extinct. It’s an issue it is rather hard to maintain a strict impartiality on.

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Another book on living pterosaurs:

The quest for discovering modern pterosaurs

Fourth Edition of what could be called “The Bible of Modern Pterosaurs,” by Jonathan David Whitcomb, but the actual title is Searching for Ropens and Finding God

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Doubting Personal Sanity

Have you seen a live pterodactyl flying overhead (I know that sounds crazy)? My first advice is this: Don’t doubt your sanity; my second: Don’t take it upon yourself to convert the Western world to your discovery of non-extinct pterosaurs. Get acquainted with the other eyewitness sightings and then report your own encounter to a cryptozoologist who specializes in that kind of cryptid, not to put too sharp a point on it: report to me.

Actually I would prefer an eyewitness would contact me first, before reading what many other eyewitnesses have seen, but I’m realistic: When somebody sends me an email to tell me about an encounter with a non-bat featherless flying creature, that person has probably already searched online and read about other sightings of apparent pterosaurs.

Skeptics and the Insanity Issue

Critics who dismiss my writings—they often mention misidentifications or hoaxes, as a general panacea, what I consider a snake-oil explanation. Skeptics don’t generally suggest eyewitnesses are crazy, although that word has been used when critics have brought up the names of those who openly believe in modern pterosaurs and promote the idea, like me and my associates.

Some eyewitnesses have been plagued by thoughts of personal insanity; that critical fact is overlooked by skeptics. A common bird or bat, under uncommon conditions, might look like a pterosaur, to somebody. Of course that’s possible; my associates and I understand such generalities. But sighting reports are about specific human experiences, and skeptics have been swimming in their own imaginations with hypothetical sightings. How dearly we need to examine the actual reports themselves, including references to how the eyewitnesses felt during and after their encounters.

The sightings reports that are sent to me sometimes refer to personal doubt about sanity. Sometimes an eyewitness will say something like, “I thought I was crazy.” That is not so easily dismissed by skeptics. A psychotic person does not come to think of insanity as an explanation for delusion or hallucination. A mentally healthy person who observes something he or she always thought  impossible—that person could doubt personal sanity, but it would take a very clear observation of what was thought impossible. Just about the last thing a human wants to consider is the possibility of being crazy.

In the 128 more-credible reports that I compiled at the end of 2012 (and analyzed), 53% of the sightings involve more than one lone eyewitness. That alone counts heavily against hallucination conjectures. But how do you explain an eyewitness who immediately doubts personal sanity after observing an apparent pterosaur? A vague encounter with something flying in the shadows would not cause a person to think he or she was crazy. Something about the encounter must have been clear enough, convincing enough, to the person, that personal sanity was questioned. How often does anybody have that kind of experience? If the encounters were extraordinary enough for that, then why insist that the thing observed must have been ordinary?

A few Sightings with Doubts About Personal Sanity

Maybe it’s a wonder that eyewitnesses of modern pterosaurs in Western countries report anything to anybody. I believe those who report their encounters are rare indeed, for a number of reasons. But for now, let’s consider a few reports in which an eyewitness had thoughts about being crazy.

In the Pinelands of New Jersey, in 2009, an appearance of a flying creature caused an eyewitness to send me a report that included the following:

“I saw a giant batlike bird, dark brown, without feathers . . . with a long thin head, a long tail, kind of leathery dark brown skin. The body seemed to be the size of a good sized man. The wing span, maybe 12-15 feet across. . . . I don’t know why I’m sending you this e-mail, maybe I just need someone to tell me I’m not crazy and that I really did see this creature.”

Lake in Virginia - photo by Gamma Man

A lake in Virginia

In the fall of 2012, an eyewitness sent me an email about an encounter she had years earlier, in Virginia (The report is on pages 183-191 of Searching for Ropens and Finding God, third edition). Here are some brief excerpts:

I was seventeen at the time of this encounter. It was very late at night. . . . I’d place the time to be somewhere between ten and midnight . . . I have no plans to be held in ridicule by my family, friends or the general population for that matter. I would REALLY like a logical explanation for what I saw . . .

I went swimming . . . at a local reservoir . . . I was standing straight up in the middle of the U section with the water about as high as my hips and I was making some splashing I remember, rather loudly, right before I saw it. It came from the direction of the moon . . . all I saw was its silhouette. I could see it was big even before it was close. . . . I have not before nor since ever been so petrified in my life. . . . I was frozen with fear . . . I felt incapable of moving my legs.

. . . The wings were somewhere between 15 and 20 feet wide and they covered the entire opening to the U-shaped inlet when they were open. The wings were bat shaped without feathers, the head’s silhouette looked like a point (again, could not see facial features as it had the moon behind it) like a head crest but what I was looking at more than anything else was its large, sharp talons.

. . . it stopped, but when it hovered there mid air 20 to 30 feet away directly in front of me about 15 to 20 feet above the water level, it moved its wings from wide outside to inside in front of its body twice which made a big “Whoosh!” sound both times and the wind it created made waves in the water coming towards me and blew my hair back and then it flew off. . . .

I think almost immediately the word ‘pterodactyl’ came to mind. . . . But almost just as quickly, I entertained the idea that it was a bird with which I was unfamiliar and which must be relatively rare in Virginia. . . . obviously a rare bird seemed more likely than a living dinosaur . . .

I think also, being afraid that I was going crazy and would soon have other wild hallucinations, I didn’t say what I thought it looked like at the time to the friend who was with me. . . . Incidentally, I had never witnessed anything out there like that before or since, nothing paranormal, no bigfoots, etc, nothing. So I eventually felt comfortable ruling out going crazy after a passage of a couple of years and no further possible hallucinations or any of the like. Also, I have never even tried illegal drugs and was not on any medication at the time, so obviously that explanation was ruled out . . .

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A Mental-Health Non-Concern

Many other eyewitness, unfortunately, have doubted their own sanity because of countless years of Western indoctrination regarding extinctions of dinosaurs and similar creatures.

Pterosaur Sighting in Kentucky

I live in Lamero, Kentucky . . . I have a friend who lives near Renfro Valley . . . a little after sunset [but] still daylight . . . Approaching us . . . flying westward were two very large animals. They were really moving on. . . . They appeared to be a brownish color and had every characteristic of a pterodactyl, from head to tail. I’d say they were roughly 15+ feet long.

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The quest for discovering modern pterosaurs

 

Searching for Ropens and Finding God – AKA “the Bible of modern pterosaurs”

This is the fourth edition of this nonfiction paperback on sightings of modern living pterosaurs, also known as “pterodactyls.” Prepare for an incredible journey into the lives of those who have searched for these wonderful flying creatures and into the lives of ordinary persons who never dreamed that they would ever encounter a “living fossil.” This is real nonfiction, in a cross genre that is more cryptozoology/true-life-adventure than spiritual. It was written for readers of all faiths. The many eyewitnesses of the flying creatures come from various countries and backgrounds and religions, so this book is written to be enjoyed by people of various backgrounds and religions.

For more information, see the home page for this nonfiction book.

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Flintstones Cartoons and Real Live Pterodactyls

Dale Drinnon, a cryptozoology researcher, sometimes comes up with an idea to discredit eyewitness reports of modern living pterosaurs, including the idea that people are observing Manta ray fish, or other kinds of rays, that jump out of the water. He has also suggested that sightings come from misidentified Hornbill birds. More recently, he has suggested that two sightings in Cuba, a few decades ago, may have come from misidentifications of a rare woodpecker; he suggests the eyewitnesses were influenced by Flintstones cartoons, or something similar, regarding their descriptions of what they had seen. I have found a number of problems with all those ideas.

But before we look at Flintstones cartoons, we need to take Mr. Drinnon’s conjecture in perspective. In his Frontiers of Zoology blog, on April 23, 2012, he published a post titled “Cuban Pterosaurs?,” which was about two eyewitness sightings of apparent pterosaurs in eastern Cuba.

Introduction to the “Gitmo Pterosaur”

It was about 1965, on the U.S. military installation in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, when Patty Carson encountered the “dinosaur” that had teeth, a long horn-like head crest, and large wings. Perhaps the children had woken up the creature from a daylight sleep in the scrub vegetation; they had no idea it was hiding there until it stood up and stared at them. The creature had no feathers, but it did have a long tail ending in a “diamond shaped tip.” The children were relieved when the “dinosaur” flew away, for “it was as tall as a man when it stood up.” I interviewed Patty Carson extensively, beginning in the spring of 2011.

1965 "Gitmo Pterosaur" or "pterodactyl" or "dinosaur" seen by two children in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba

Sketch by the eyewitness Patty Carson

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One clear day in 1971, also in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the United States Marine Eskin C. Kuhn was taking a break outside, by himself, when he observed two “pterodactyls” flying together, not far away from where he was standing. He reported they were flying “at low altitude, perhaps 100 feet [high].” He also said, “The Pterosaurs I saw had the short hind legs attached to the rearward-most part of the wing, and they had a long tail trailing behind with a tuft of hair at the end.” I gave Mr. Kuhn a surprise phone call on February 26, 2010, and our conversation confirmed to me his credibility.

Pterosaur-by-Kuhn-C2

Sketch by the eyewitness Eskin Kuhn

A major point of these two sketches is that they were both drawn by eyewitnesses who carefully watched large flying creatures in eastern Cuba, in 1965 and in 1971, so the similarities strongly suggest they were of the same kind of creature, quite possibly the same species. Both Carson and Kuhn stared at these flying creatures intently, taking into their memories the characteristics that they would later put onto paper in their sketches.

Flintstones Cartoon Hallucination?

When is the last time you took a walk in a park and had the following kind of experience? You see a crow flying overhead and your favorite television program causes you to hallucinate and think you saw a pterodactyl. You never had that experience? Why believe that anybody else had such an experience?

If it seems strange that one person would have a pterosaur-hallucination from watching television, what about two persons having the same hallucination from watching the same television program? How ridiculous!

I suggest that Mr. Drinnon has himself been caught up in a fantasy by believing that other persons are the victims of television-caused mental aberrations. When two persons saw the same thing, at the same general place, it’s because they saw something real. If television cartoons caused mass hallucinations, I think somebody would have found some evidence for that.

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Woodpeckers, Flintstones, and Long-Tailed Pterosaurs

How far some skeptics will go to find a non-pterosaur explanation for pterosaur sightings! Featherless long-tailed flying creatures with long bony head crests are not misidentifications of woodpeckers . . .

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News Release: Pterodactyl in Cuba

Retired forensic videographer Jonathan  Whitcomb, of Long Beach, California, used to interview accident victims  for attorney firms; now he interviews only eyewitnesses of apparent  pterosaurs, what many Americans call “pterodactyls.”

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