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Thread: El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

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    Default El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

    El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved, Expert Claims

    By Bjorn Carey
    Published March 23, 2011
    | LiveScience

    WAVE3
    Has a mythical creature made its way to Kentucky? Some people seem to think so

    Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster rank as the top two best-known monsters in the world, but since its 1995 debut, El Chupacabra has made a Justin Bieber-like ascension to No. 3 on the charts. The relative newcomer to the monster world is the go-to culprit for weird livestock deaths and creates a massive media stir whenever it's "sighted." It even has a fan club on Facebook.
    That could all end, now that Benjamin Radford, author of several books on monsters and paranormal phenomena, managing editor of the journal The Skeptical Inquirer and LiveScience columnist, has released what he says to be definitive proof that El Chupacabra is not real; it's not even a hoax, he said, but rather a leftover memory of a science-fiction film.
    Stories of El Chupacabra first surfaced in March 1995 in Puerto Rico, Radford said, when dead, blood-drained goats began showing up (El Chupacabra translates to "goat sucker"). That August, a newspaper printed an eyewitness description of a bipedal creature, 4 to 5 feet tall with spikes down its back, long, thin arms and legs, and an alienlike oblong head with red or black eyes. That depiction became associated with El Chupacabra, and it reports of similar creatures began popping up throughout the Caribbean, in Latin America, Mexico and Florida.
    The frenzy had died down slightly by 2000, but picked back up in 2004 when something began attacking livestock in Texas. A farmer shot one of the offenders, and later more alleged El Chupacabra carcasses turned up. They looked nothing like the Puerto Rico original, though, and DNA tests later revealed that they were actually coyotes with a severe case of mange.
    On top of the sudden change in appearance—a hairless, snarly-looking four-legged creature is the popular depiction in Texas—these coyotes didn't even act like El Chupacabra. "When you did a necropsy of the chickens and goats that they attacked, they all had normal blood levels," Radford told Life's Little Mysteries. "They were not, in fact, vampirized."

    "By the mid-2000s, anything weird was being called El Chupacabra," he said. "Mangy coyotes. Dead raccoons. Even a dried fish in New Mexico, which looks nothing like El Chupacabra." And yet the myth continued to gain momentum, so Radford, who has researched El Chupacabra and other strange sightings around the world for years, decided to cut it off at the head and set off to Puerto Rico to trace the beast back to its fictional roots. (Disclosure: Radford is a contributing writer to Life's Little Mysteries and columnist for its sister site, LiveScience.)
    Mistaken identity
    Radford dug through every El Chupacabra mention and traced the physical description of the monster to a single event in the second week of August 1995, when a sketch from an eyewitness named Madelyne Tolentino ran in a Puerto Rican newspaper. Locals immediately tagged the alien-looking animal as El Chupacabra.
    The creature, Radford noticed, shared a strong resemblance to the alien/human hybrid in the 1995 sci-fi thriller "Species." When he spoke to Tolentino, he asked her if the thing that she saw could have been inspired by the film. Indeed, she had seen the movie in the weeks prior to making her description.
    "You can make a direct connection between the film hitting theaters, her seeing the creature in the film, seeing it in the street, making the report and entering the public conscious," Radford said.
    Soon after, reports of nearly identical creatures began appearing throughout Latin America. But these can be dismissed, Radford says, because they're all based on Tolentino's Hollywood-inspired monster.
    "What I've tried to do is take the whole El Chupacabra enchilada and break it into small mysteries and then solve those mysteries," Radford said. "There's no place else for those mysteries to hide now. If I haven't solved every piece of it, then I don't know what I'm missing. It's all there."
    "That said, if next month or next year somebody finds El Chupacabra that's sucking blood from animals, I'm happy to eat my crow and add a chapter to the book."
    The last word
    Even if you're not convinced by DNA evidence or Radford's research, simple logic should help you realize that El Chupacabra just doesn't exist.
    For one thing, it would take a couple hundred to a few thousand of the creatures to keep the species alive. If each of those animals is five feet tall and weighs around 100 pounds, it would be pretty difficult for there to be no confirmed sightings or fossils, particularly on an island as small and as densely populated as Puerto Rico.
    For another, even if the beasts managed to hide, they'd still need a lot of food, and if they are actually vampires, then you'd expect to find a lot more blood-drained carcasses.
    If true believers have one complaint against Radford's work, he expects them to say that it's implausible that Tolentino saw something that doesn't exist. Radford, who has a degree in psychology, chalks that up to confabulation, a common scenario in which people simply confuse the fictional and real worlds. [10 Urban Legends Debunked]
    "The question then becomes which is more likely, the astronomical chance that this creature looks exactly like the one from 'Species,' or that the film is just where she got the depiction?" Radford said.
    So why does the myth persist? Radford says it's the result of a perfect storm of urban legend-brewing conditions. El Chupacabra was one of the first mythical beasts discovered in the Internet age, and its image and story spread around the world — and especially to Spanish-speaking countries — in a matter of weeks. It also gained the early support of UFO enthusiasts, who latched onto the idea that the creature was alien, or an alien's pet, as well as the conspiracy/cover-up angle often associated with forensic analyses of the "beast."
    Radford has another theory: "The thing about myths is that people want to believe in things," he said. "I suppose that, in a perverse way, there's something comforting in that there's this vampiric monster that doesn't attack humans."



    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/...#ixzz1HSBpFPVU
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    Default Re: El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

    So this guy proved a negative?
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
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    Default Re: El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

    Got me. lol
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    Default Re: El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

    I think the main thing is without any evidence he's using dna from other creatures to try to prove it isn't there.
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    Default Re: El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

    That's not a coyote. Ok, well, maybe. lol

    Might be a tortoise, or a cow too.





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    Default Re: El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

    “Chupacabra” Sighting: Truth Behind the Mythical Beasts

    Posted by Christine Dell'Amore of National Geographic News in Weird & Wild on October 31, 2013WLOX.com - The News for South Mississippi



    A mythical monster has reared its head again: the chupacabra. A family in Picayune, Mississippi, has captured video of a “chupacabra” recently near their home and posted it online, according to the news station WLOX.



    The family soon discovered others had noticed the mysterious animal, including Amanda Denton, who told Jackson’s Clarion-Ledger: ”We’ve been running back and forth to our cars because we didn’t want the chupacabra to get us.”


    In reality, this odd beast poses no threat to humans—it’s actually a coyote with mange. (See “Chupacabra Science: How Evolution Made a Mythical Monster.”)
    Stories of animals that suck the blood of livestock have exploded in Mexico, the U.S. Southwest, and even China since the mid-1990s, when the chupacabra, or chupacabras, was first reported in Puerto Rico (map).


    In almost all these cases, the monsters have turned out to be coyotes suffering from very severe cases of mange, a painful, potentially fatal skin disease that can cause the animals’ hair to fall out and skin to shrivel, among other symptoms, National Geographic News reported in 2010. (Related: “‘Balding’ Bears: Mangy Mystery in Florida.”)


    For some scientists, this explanation for supposed chupacabras is sufficient. “I don’t think we need to look any further or to think that there’s yet some other explanation for these observations,” Barry OConnor, a University of Michigan entomologist who has studied Sarcoptes scabiei, the parasite that causes mange, said in 2010.


    Likewise, wildlife-disease specialist Kevin Keel has seen images of an alleged chupacabra corpse and clearly recognized it as a coyote, but said he could imagine how others might not.


    “It still looks like a coyote, just a really sorry excuse for a coyote,” said Keel, of the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study at the University of Georgia.


    “I wouldn’t think it’s a chupacabras if I saw it in the woods, but then I’ve been looking at coyotes and foxes with mange for a while. A layperson, however, might be confused as to its identity.”


    As for the Mississippi coyote, it’s probably more visible to people because it’s been rummaging for garbage and pet food.


    Master Sergeant David Burnette told the Clarion-Ledger that the coyote is ”probably sick, weak, and not able to hunt on its own, so it’s going to the nearest food source it can find.”

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    Default Re: El Chupacabra Mystery Definitively Solved

    Chupacabra VIDEO: Is it the Mythical Blood-Sucking Creature, or Just a Sick Coyote?
    Posted by Russell Westerholm (r.westerholm@universityherald.com) on Oct 31, 2013 10:03 AM EDT


    With the arrival of Halloween, it only seems fitting that a mythical creature, like the Chupacabra, should make an appearance in a quiet, like Picayune, Miss.


    (YouTube Screenshot) Is this the mythical Chupacabra, or a sick coyote?

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    Taking many forms in its folklore, this beast looked like a dog to local residents, who even caught it on video. One resident told WLOX she took the threat of the wild beast so seriously, she was looking it up and keeping a safe distance.

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    "I kept looking up 'hairless coyote,' and it kept saying 'Chupacabra,'" said Amanda Denton. "We've been running back and forth to our cars because we didn't want the Chupacabra to get us."

    Jennifer Whitfield and her 11-year-old son Justin first spotted the creepy canine in a lot near their home and it was the young boy who thought it was the Chupacabra. They shot the video, posted it online and watching it spread.

    "If a zombie had a dog, it would look like that," said Whitfield.

    After posting the video, they found others had spotted the same dog-like creature. Denton's husband Jonathan was clueless as well and animal control offered little help identifying the beast.

    "I didn't know what it was, but then Animal Control couldn't find it, so maybe it was a Chupacabra," he said.

    Another local family had a different theory, but still though it was a strange and mythical creature.

    "My dad said that it was a 'squatchdog' because he's obsessed with watching 'Finding Bigfoot'," said Caroline Cooper, 17.

    The legend of the Chupacabra originated in Puerto Rico sometime in the 70s when goats and other animals were randomly found dead, with all their body's blood drained and no signs of rigor mortis. The name "Chupacabra" translates from Spanish to English as "goat-sucker" and the legend was born.

    The Chupacabra has never been caught, and unlike the sasquatch (or bigfoot) there has yet to be even a close scientific call. According to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks, it will stay that way. Master Sergeant David Burnette theorized just from looking at the footage that the animal was a coyote with a bad case of mange, a disease that rots the skin.

    "It's probably sick, weak, and not able to hunt on its own, so it's going to the nearest food source it can find," said Sgt. Burnette.

    Read more at http://www.universityherald.com/arti...w54bIfyDFdK.99

    Video at link: http://www.universityherald.com/arti...ick-coyote.htm

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