Large black cats exist, but the "black panther" is is really a leopard or jaguar.
Jaguar:
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Black panther - Wikipedia
Bruce
Between you and MossRoad, we learn about many things besides tractors here. :thumbsup:
Large black cats exist, but the "black panther" is is really a leopard or jaguar.
Jaguar:
View attachment 615345
Black panther - Wikipedia
Bruce
It beats buying an setting up and tearing down the ferris wheel in the next town . And dealing with inspection and lawsuits and with all due respect ,some carnys .The Strange Case of the Minnesota Iceman - Scientific American Blog Network
Not a bad "gig" traveling around just makeing sure the "iceman" doesn't thaw or melt . Now the "bearded " lady I know exist !
I woke up to one years ago after a heavy nite of partying !!! :laughing:
I'm waiting for proof Big Foot exists. But, in the meantime I'm not willing to say he doesn't exist. Whenever someone says something doesn't exist because we've never found one, there's the story of the Coelacanths that went extinct 65 million years ago - or so we thought.
"Coelacanths were thought to be extinct until a live one was caught in 1938. Coelacanths were known only from fossils until a live Latimeria chalumnae was discovered off the coast of South Africa in 1938. Until then, they were presumed to have gone extinct in the late Cretaceous period, over 65 million years ago."
What I find rather humorous is the fact that before the advent of digital cameras (especially on most cell phones and the millions of game cameras out in the field) there were more images and videos popping up claiming to have captured bigfoot on film...now with all those cameras there are still no (unaltered) pics...
'Why do we sometimes believe in things we've never seen?'
-Steve Farmer, The Amboy Dukes.
'Why do we sometimes believe in things we've never seen?'
-Steve Farmer, The Amboy Dukes.
True, and that is a very compelling reason to believe that BigFoot does not exist. However, all we have of shark fossils is their teeth since there are no other bony materials in them and they can get quite large. Yes, they are in the water and supported by it so that's not the same as on land. But, until we actually find one, I'm on the "well, maybe it's true" side of the quest.But we did have a fossil record of the coelacanths...something that does not exist or has never been found for a bigfoot type creature...nor has there ever been any type of DNA evidence from physical specimens (tissue, scat, bones etc.)...EVERYTHING to date has proven to be from an known existing species...same goes for the so called chupacabra...