Yeah, it’s not even really debatable, it just _is_ a grainy photo of a beaver. It’s got the posture, the flatish face, the tail… even the fur matches exactly.
Don't see anyone mentioning the "New Carnivore" from 3:18 but when you first said flying squirrel I said out loud "no way" and then the picture of the rare species popped up and I immediately changed to "yeah, that's 100% a flying squirrel"
Yeah the way it hunched in the first pic i assumed it was some like scrounging civet as mentioned later in the segment, but the second a photo of that squirrel was shown on screen its just like yeah that is entirely one of those squirrels. It looks literally the exact same with the fur colour and the tail, I can’t imagine it being still a debate in this day and age
I really like that you make videos about what I can only describe as "credible cryptids." Mystery animals like these, animals we thought might exist like Audobon's sea eagle, and animals we thought might be fictitious like the okapi. The stories of how academic biology learns what animals are real and what aren't is so much more interesting than watching the fifteen millionth video about Mothman. Although i do love me a good Mothman video, too.
I really feel ya on this. I'm so tired of hearing about megalodon living in the deep sea or thylacine recordings that are just other marsupials, but cases like the gigarcanum are so cool. You're telling me we have the body of a giant gecko that nobody has ever seen since, and it was just found in the collection of a museum??? That's such a compelling mystery. There's even actually crazy shit like ball lightning or upper atmospheric lightning that sounds like sci-fi but actually exists AND we don't even understand exactly what they are. If we could dedicate effort to cool stuff like that over some random dead raccoon on a beach that'd be great. I also agree that there are some staple cryptids that are great as folklore rather than mysteries. The chupacabra is definitely not real, I've barely heard of any convincing evidence of the Jersey Devil, and Mothman and the Flatwoods Monster are definitely owls, but they're so much more than just something a crazy person claimed to see in their backyard. I believe Darren Naish said something about cryptids being valuable as lenses to see people's beliefs and culture through, and I couldn't agree more. I've always loved cryptids, but man people will get attached to the actual least compelling stories possible (I'm looking at The Bloop when I say that)
@@SassyGirl822006 Trey's videos about cryptids are great. I've been watching him for about a decade at this point, and his older videos still hold up in terms of the discussion of the cryptids. great stuff.
Yeah, this is my “angle of interest” too and I had nearly given up on finding a channel that leans toward science while acknowledging that there are new discoveries & old mysteries constantly and some do merit investigation
this is sooo refreshing. you dont try to tell me what to think, you dont throw out made up theories for engagement bait and you also let us explore fantasy while staying grounded in science! great video, really nice writing and smooth edits!!!
The Amarillo zoo creature is a human being in a very good costume. I suspect the zoo employees themselves, it gave the zoo a lot of free publicity. I live in Amarillo, and I have never seen a bipedal feline like that outside of the ELDER SCROLLS games.
That squeal in Oregon? Sounds like squealing train breaks. I live by train tracks. It’s almost unmistakable… except the fact that several things can squeal like that….
Same thought, I seem to be drawn to living way too close to train tracks, but I actually was thinking brakes. Train routes & highways are close together here, and the sound is like a semi brakes on steroids, so I was thinking more like brakes on factory mechanics. But if there was a nearby factory operating at night, it would be mentioned probably. But also, there are some WILD natural calls. And parrots exist and can put nearly any sound in any location with enough planning/coincidence. altho they usually lose interest in a sound much faster. But I was cracking up about aliens in the filbert orchards & we call em filberts too, I LOLd years ago when I realized the Nutella-induced hazelnut craze, which ppl were pretending was very posh, was just filberts. Delicious but hardly the epitome of European fancy heehee
Having had a car with messed up brakes it DEFINITELY sounds like brakes from some kind of vehicle. Train is my best bet too but I wouldn't be surprised if it was a truck or farming equipment or something. Even a regular car with really worn down brake pads can be close to that loud.
We almost lost the American beaver & we really should be more excited to see them!!! To me, the fact that the beaver population is nice and healthy and they take good care of our rivers and streams/ that’s way more exciting than making up chupacabra species. Beavers are adorable and very hard working! One of the best friends of humanity, quite honestly.
The what Beaver? last time i checked Castor canadensis meant The Canadian Beaver just like Lynx canadensis means The Canadian Lynx americanus means American, like Ursus americanus, The American Black Bear or americana means American like Corylus americana, the American Hazelnut
I’m so glad you didn’t title this “13 hOrRifYInG mOnsTerS cAughT oN cAmErA *nOt cLickBaiT* *dOnT WaTch aT 3 aM* *tRuE StoRieS*” or something stupid like that
The chupacabra is actually real, by the way. It's just a different breed of Mexican coyote that eats farm animals, yeah perhaps history overextended it
The Amarillo creature looks like someone tried (and failed) to replicate the artstyle of a Trevor Henderson monster. It looks really 2D to me in a way none of the other images in this video do. If it is an unaltered picture then it's definitely a person. The range of motion in the shoulders is way too flexible to be a dog, not that the "creature" even looks like a dog besides the head. This sighting would be wholly unremarkable if it weren't for the fact it was caught on a security camera, though that too could just be a publicity stunt (as you implied). Edit: I am happy that, while you did include some of the more fantastical and unrealistic explanations for these cases, you prefaced when theories were less logically sound. There is also a good variety of logical explanations (or THE explanation for the cases that are solved, like The Bloop), which definitely preserves the mystery in a way that isn't "it was aliens/ghosts."
It actually kind of does look like a Trevor creature tbh. The darkness, the low lighting, the mysterious aura of the creature, the bipedalism of a quadruped-type animal, the spookiness and eeriness the image gives off, and the way it creeps me out and gives me nightmares like every single Trevor artwork I’ve ever seen, makes this plausible. Buuut this is actually a real photo taken by security cameras at a zoo. (Sorry if this was too much of a mouthful) ^w^
The "Chupacabra" is most likely a muskrat, not a beaver. They live around water and are often mistaken for beavers, but they have different tails (flatish, but thinner and hairy). They can also have lighter fur on the underside that sweeps up into the inner thigh, similar to the animal in the photo. Beavers are always a uniform color.
Should find more bones eventually, but I don't think we're finding it alive. Mainland New Caledonia has a decent fossil record, so it's probably from one of the smaller islands around it.
The Untouchable Fish are another cool example of this. While many of them are likely to just be misidentified deep sea species, some of them are quite striking. The 4 foot dragonfish with 2 lures is the poster-child of this group of supposed fish, and yeah nothing like that has been seen since. Makes you wonder if some of these fish have since gone extinct, as we've dramatically altered the ocean's ecosystems. It's more likely they're just misidentified, but still.
Umm I’ve always assumed that we only know about 20-30% of the animals who ever lived. But every year we find new ones, there’s plenty of fossils left to find in the massive public lands of the US West and paleo & archaeo digs occur literally every summer all over the west. The exciting news is that we’ll never stop discovering extinct species, we’ll never know everything but that’s Gods business anyway lol 😉
Only like 5% of all species fossilize, and only an even smaller percentage end up in the right time and place to be found, so probably hundreds of millions
Amarillo is a furry lol. For whatever reason took a 'shortcut' by the fence (Is there a trail by that area?) and triggered the camera. Then the city used the photo as publicity.
Our zoo is located in our biggest park right by a golf course and demolished water park. I certainly think it was a publicity thing to get more people to come to our *tiny* boring zoo. I personally believe they photoshopped one of their baby black bears
Ok I just learned why a muntjac is! How did I never know of these? I love deer!!! But I’m cracking up, they kind of look like the jackalope, which isn’t really a cryptid (no one believes in it, they’re a cross between a jackrabbit/large hare and a pronghorn/american antelope, how would they even mate?😂), it’s more of a prank. We go looking for jackalope during the day, snipe hunting at night! But now I want to use muntjac photos to mess with people…
@@standdownrobots_ihaveoldgloryas a UK resident, I have been charged at by one, and had one living in my tiny garden next to a main road. They are invasive and annoying but also funny little creatures, we named our garden one "Monty"
@@standdownrobots_ihaveoldglory Jackalope perhaps = Rabbits/Hares with Papillomavirus. I always find the Thing with the Snipe Hunt funny, acting as if it's a made up Creature when those are Birds that actually exist
@@martinharris5017 it looks like a poor quality homemade one, like the ones you see in early 90s recordings of cons lol. Guy was probably just too embarrassed to say "hey that's me".
Same with my cat. but thats maybe because its already a hurting sound. Or maybe because it sounds Like a Break so they think its danger cause they know cars.
The turtle pond one could also have been a gar. Long nosed Gar are not uncommon and breathe air, even when the water is plentifully oxygenated. If they had sent the photo to ichyologists, they probably wouldhave gotten this answer.
23:11 That's very likely not a Wallaby. They do not move their back legs independently to walk. The feet are not right either. It's likely a dog or fox.
@@piretiris8223 yes it is, it is alternating stretching it's hind legs, like it just stood up from lying down - one photo is one back leg, the other is the alternate.
In the shorter clips of the sound I'd heard before it sounded like it could've been organic, but in the longer clip in this video it certainly sounds artificial. I'm not an expert, but the long, sustained shrill sounds more like machinery to me than an animal cry. It's still a really neat mystery; imagine hearing metallic shrieking for a few nights and then it never happens again. So odd.
That may not be a wallaby in Scotland, thanks to its hind part and legs. They're too slender for a wallaby. It's most likely a fox with some condition that has caused it to lose its fur on its tail.
Australia here 🇦🇺, that's NOT a Wallaby !! Wallabies rear legs don't move independent to each other and are much more muscular than this animal. They're also a lot furrier. It's very obviously a medium size well fed, short haired dog.
Do not count out big cats here in the UK! Although I will preface this with I'm not talking Lions & Siberian Tigers 😄 I've had 3 person experiences. 2 are connected & explained, 1 was very odd & is a bit more believe it if you want to! Living in the middle of nowhere, lots of farmland & patches of woodland. My friends & I would go on crazy long walks, explore the woodland, the occasional disused army base, that kinda thing. We saw a pretty decent sized cat, it had a shaggy mane, really long tail! A bit bigger than my lurcher. Tried to film it, tried to take pics nothing particularly clear. We told EVERYONE! Then a few days later, the farmer that owned most of the land had told a few people he'd shot & killed a big cat he'd never seen before as it had attacked & killed multiple lambs. So a few of us went to his farmhouse & BEGGED to see it! Sure enough it looked like what we'd seen, he ended up paying a BIG Fine that he was really not happy about haha. Turned out it was an extremely rare species of Lynx that are almost never seen in our area, it was male so they think it was pushed out of a territory & made it's way into ours. The other? On a train to Cornwall to stay with my buddy who moved there. People on the train start pointing, raised voices WTF IS THAT!? There was someone walking their dog along the top of a steep hill & at the bottom I would describe as stalking, really low set, crouch walking almost? Long, Black, Chunky Rounded Head & a reaaaaaally long tail. Everyone was quite excited we saw the beast of bodmin Moore (miles from Bodmin btw 😄)
@@edwardfletcher7790 Not wanting to start an argument before I continue as I'm genuinely wondering what it is!! You don't think Wallaby? I'm not sure it's a dog, I can see what you mean but where it is, the time & the fact it looks in good condition unless the dog got out accidentally? Someone wouldn't let a dog like that just go stray at night. The Tail is what bugs me, my family has Lurchers as I mentioned. The leg muscle, general build? Could absolutely be a Deerhound/cross, they have that wirey fur we can see in the stills. Maybe the camera angle/position is distorting it a little? The tail looks disproportionately long, aka more cat like!
@@pirate_duck4985 the back leg/foot conformation is absolutely not a cat. it's too small. The animal in the image has a very obvious, defined toe pattern that is very, very canine.
19:32 I had no idea there was even a gecko THAT large. What an adorable unit! Thank you for these videos! My 3 year old and I love to watch them whenever we can. We always learn something new.
Too bad they are gone long before we have awareness about how unique they are and should be protected, make thing even sadder is we know so little about it
@@KENSHIROez3260 hey, ya never know, there’s a _chance_ they’re not. We thought crested geckos were extinct for ages, before finding out we were just looking in the wrong location. Apparently they’re from around the same area, right? So maybe they’re hanging out somewhere, waiting to be found again. It’s not likely, but it’s more plausible than a thylacine, and I still hope that those are secretly still around. 🤷♀️
24:39 ETA: Did some asking around. It’s a red fox. This is a molting red fox. Case closed. Interesting… It’s definitely not any carnivore-type animal (feliform/caniform). It’s not any dog, fox, wolf, or any of their relatives because the hind end is shaped completely incorrectly. The tail is held very stiffly, held in a way for balance whereas animals in the Canis category don’t use their tails like that. Foxes do, but even a mange fox’s tail is not held so stiffly, and it’s too long compared to the body. It’s not any cat because again, incorrect body proportions. And while most, if not all cats hold their tails out for balance, it’s still too stiff and oddly shaped for any kind of climbing or even balance when running, remember, cats run on all fours. I was going to point out that they’re right it could be a wallaby, but even rock wallabies, the ones you mentioned were released, hind feet don’t look like that. They are long, while this animal’s feet are small paws like a cat’s. And while the body slopes down slightly, it’s not as steep as any large marsupial. And the ears seem short and wide. It seems the hind legs are longer than the forelegs, but it seems from these pictures the weight is distributed evenly, and the forelimbs are too long for any large marsupial either. But - it DOES look like a marsupial. And more specifically, it’s gonna sound crazy and I highly doubt that it’s even possible since it’s from Tasmania and is also extinct - it looks like a Thylacine, without the stripes of course. Thylacine are marsupials, but have a carnivore-like body shape as they filled a similar niche. But upon researching Thylacine, the peculiar, dog-like way they move, hind end is sleek and you can see the bone area. The entire body is long and lanky. Tail is stiff and is held off the ground for balance, similar to the way kangaroos and wallabies hold their tails. The muzzle seems very long like the Thylacine’s. While I don’t think the Thylacine is still alive, this would be incredibly striking evidence if it was in Australia or more notably, Tasmania. I am still in awe of this animal’s conformation. The only evidence I could find for the Thylacine even being able to exist, apparently there was one in a zoo in Glasglow, Scotland, and apparently there have been more “reports” on Thylacine in Scotland. So while it may be possible, albeit incredibly unlikely, there seems to be a small chance. And an even smaller chance given the animal in question seems to be greyish or tannish in coloration with light undersides. Honestly, I’m stumped on this one. 😅
I was watching a video on the Montauk Project that a youtuber I follow posted just last week (for Halloween) and she started talking about the Montauk Beach monster and how no one has any idea what it is, and I'm just like "it's a racoon, hun. It's just a racoon"
24:34 it’s definitely not a wallaby as the animal in the picture walks on its toes like a dog. It’s probably a fox that just isn’t fluffy or has mange.
The Forest Grove Sound (yah for Forest Grove, Oregon, love the place) sounded mechanical to me. The beaver seemed obvious as a beaver too. And the final one looks like someone in some strange clothing, a person. Fun video.
People say that everything is a "mutant" when there are only very few possible mutations per animal. It's not like there's a recessive gene in the iguana genome that is related to fire breath and flight.
My parents used to both work at Plum Island and I can assure you the island didn't lab create the monster lol but they do regular testing for hoof and mouth disease and shoot anything that washes up on the island as a heath safety protocol.
imagine hearing a noise that obviously sounds like a faulty alarm and jumping straight to bigfoot yea those mystery apes invented smoke alarms centuries ago but forgot how to make batteries so it constantly malfunctions
Chupacabra made me audibly say "bruh." We've proven it to be a coyote time and time again, honestly one of the goofiest cryptids. Also, I'm fairly certain that's a wallaby. I used to work with them and their silhouette is unmistakable
The forest grove sound is very reminiscent of my brakes when I don't put enough brake fluid in the engine. I wonder if it's either a malfuntioning rotor or turbine of some sort, or some other mechanical issue.
7:01 are there pipes under this place? because my bathroom tap sounds exactly like this when someone else is using the kitchen tap downstairs, also it being underground could explain it being "hard to pinpoint"
THANK YOU SO MCUH ALLABOUTNATURE YOU MAKE MY DAYS SO MUCH BETTER, I LOVE WATCHING YOUR NATURE VIDEOS THEY ARE SO COOL AND I LOVE ANIMALS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! KEEP ON COOKING KING
Not disagreeing to be mean but look at the lower jaw. I believe there are teeth. I think that it is a normal animal exposed to the salt water and normal weathering. I am just not sure what kind of animal. As for the news, I trust very little of them from ANY side of the political sphere. Lol, be well and God bless.
12:40 I think he's right about it being a Fisher, I think it's captured in mid run - so it's body looks compacted as the hind legs catch up to the fronts.
If the zoos security cam was motion activated (or video, really the only two options) then there would be multiple pics of the alleged creature. Def seems like a small zoo trying to gain more traffic
I remember a lot of people said the last one was a furry (like something in a fur suit) Plus the cloud/sky noises is interesting, but also scary if you don’t know what it could be
That is not Bigfoot or anything like it on the suggestions. What everyone is hearing in Forest grove, it's some old emergency service siren that was malfunctioning. Sounds exactly like our emergency services siren when it gets stuck where I live, the high end, then it not going down to the lower pitch. Fisher looking thing ... well it is a fisher, but a pregnant one or I like your theory of it being a beaver.
I think the concept of cryptids exemplify people's lack of science education and critical thinking. It's frustrating to see people insist crytids exist based on blurry photos and witness testimony from people who could be lying or mentally ill.
Just the blurry photos and videos alone make me laugh. The majority of people on earth have a device that can easily capture pretty good quality visuals and audio, if you're only finding blurry garbage it's because it was intentionally made blurry (or it was made years and years ago and was then picked to be used later)
I always thought the montauk monster looked like a mildly squish-faced dog. Nothing near the level of a bulldog, but maybe a boxer. Also: my cat REALLY did not like the Forest Grove Sound.
Gigarcanum is so fascinating to me, I wonder if there’s even a chance there might be some still around today in the most remote areas of New Caledonia. Exciting stuff to think about
I'm not saying I'm a reliable source, but when I saw the second animal I *instantly* thought "squirrel" so I'm gonna put my bet on the flying squirrel hypothesis. Also PLEASE add a warning for that third one on my god, I was not prepared for the physical fucking pain of that screeching.
the bloop didnt even sound like the sound everyone is familiar with. the one we know as bloop is very sped up and pitch shifted, while the original sound is muuuuuch slower and in such a low frequency that you cant really hear it. it's practically never brought up and it sucks because people still say it cant be just an iceberg or whatever, because they have only heard the version that is sped up and pitch shifted.
Y’all be going insane with these monster noises or images, *NO GUYS.* Majority of these would’ve been found already- obviously especially the met (though it was around 40-80(?) feet long) also! We find Meg teeth guess where? SHALLOW DRIED UP RIVERS or 20 FEET DOWN RIVERS-
I'm an Aussie, as soon as I i saw the 'scottish big cat' photo in the title card I thought it was a kangaroo. Showed it to my family, saying simply that it was taken in Scotland and is suspected to be a big cat. Every single person said something along the lines of 'looks like a kangaroo' or 'how did that get there' (i.e. obviously a Kangaroo). It's a kangaroo or wallaby for sure, almost certainly the rednecked wallaby (though i have been given to understand that sometimes people in the UK keep kangaroos/wallabies as pets, and it could be an escaped pet of a different species. I'm not knowledgeable enough to be able to tell more than the main species apart at a glance).
Great video. Always love this kind of thing. Sure the last one is a hoax. Would be wonderful if they had a trip to New Caladonia to find the Giant Gecko! Al the best, John.
The chupacabra is 100% a porcupine they look pretty weird after they lose their quills in a fight with something and they do infact have long tails you just can’t see them when the quills are there
That Peak District animal is just a bloody fox with skin disease… There used to be one just like that regularly coming to my front door and sleeping on the doormat, they can look ghastly without their fur haha
A train whistle more likely since there are tracks quite close to the town. Under the right conditions some sound waves can travel for 10 to 100 of miles
@@ルカ写真撮影 That's true. We have both a dockyard and train lines a good few kilometres away from where I live and on winter nights when there aren't as many sounds, you can hear the whistles from both.
Yeah, when that "Chupacabra" photo came up, I immediately said "beaver". The flat tail is right there.
Yeah, it’s not even really debatable, it just _is_ a grainy photo of a beaver. It’s got the posture, the flatish face, the tail… even the fur matches exactly.
It was just the wierd angle that made it look wierd
Beaver or a porcupine having a bad day because some hairs do look quite quill like and that face just screams rodent
I verbally shouted beaver
It's clearly a malnourished beaver
That gecko was the most interesting and surprising one for me.
I laughed out loud when the beaver was called a potential chupicabra.
I was going to say if that’s a chupacabra then my uncle must be Sasquatch
Don't see anyone mentioning the "New Carnivore" from 3:18 but when you first said flying squirrel I said out loud "no way" and then the picture of the rare species popped up and I immediately changed to "yeah, that's 100% a flying squirrel"
I agree
Yeah the way it hunched in the first pic i assumed it was some like scrounging civet as mentioned later in the segment, but the second a photo of that squirrel was shown on screen its just like yeah that is entirely one of those squirrels. It looks literally the exact same with the fur colour and the tail, I can’t imagine it being still a debate in this day and age
i thought it was a cat
I love how I can hear you cringed under your voice when theory of bloop sound come from Megalodon
fr, people who said that have no idea what they're talking about.
Tf is that theory,
Megalodon is a fish it don't make sounds
What's goodie-what's goodie-what's goodie!?
@@Mr.superqueenkingLiam69940 you’re not educated enough to comment on something like this and make that suggestion
I really like that you make videos about what I can only describe as "credible cryptids." Mystery animals like these, animals we thought might exist like Audobon's sea eagle, and animals we thought might be fictitious like the okapi. The stories of how academic biology learns what animals are real and what aren't is so much more interesting than watching the fifteen millionth video about Mothman.
Although i do love me a good Mothman video, too.
I really feel ya on this. I'm so tired of hearing about megalodon living in the deep sea or thylacine recordings that are just other marsupials, but cases like the gigarcanum are so cool. You're telling me we have the body of a giant gecko that nobody has ever seen since, and it was just found in the collection of a museum??? That's such a compelling mystery. There's even actually crazy shit like ball lightning or upper atmospheric lightning that sounds like sci-fi but actually exists AND we don't even understand exactly what they are. If we could dedicate effort to cool stuff like that over some random dead raccoon on a beach that'd be great.
I also agree that there are some staple cryptids that are great as folklore rather than mysteries. The chupacabra is definitely not real, I've barely heard of any convincing evidence of the Jersey Devil, and Mothman and the Flatwoods Monster are definitely owls, but they're so much more than just something a crazy person claimed to see in their backyard. I believe Darren Naish said something about cryptids being valuable as lenses to see people's beliefs and culture through, and I couldn't agree more.
I've always loved cryptids, but man people will get attached to the actual least compelling stories possible (I'm looking at The Bloop when I say that)
Trey the Explainer just uploaded a Mothman video. 😂
He doesn't spread conspiracies, he debunks them.
@@SassyGirl822006 Trey's videos about cryptids are great. I've been watching him for about a decade at this point, and his older videos still hold up in terms of the discussion of the cryptids. great stuff.
Yeah, this is my “angle of interest” too and I had nearly given up on finding a channel that leans toward science while acknowledging that there are new discoveries & old mysteries constantly and some do merit investigation
@@xemiii Are there any specific discoveries or phenomena do you think deserve more attention instead of the typical cryptid stories?
this is sooo refreshing. you dont try to tell me what to think, you dont throw out made up theories for engagement bait and you also let us explore fantasy while staying grounded in science! great video, really nice writing and smooth edits!!!
The Amarillo zoo creature is a human being in a very good costume. I suspect the zoo employees themselves, it gave the zoo a lot of free publicity.
I live in Amarillo, and I have never seen a bipedal feline like that outside of the ELDER SCROLLS games.
I live in Amarillo too, I highly doubt a bipedal hedgehog thing would go unspotted being that close to downtown, in our most major park
That squeal in Oregon? Sounds like squealing train breaks. I live by train tracks. It’s almost unmistakable… except the fact that several things can squeal like that….
Definitely sounded mechanical.
Same thought, I seem to be drawn to living way too close to train tracks, but I actually was thinking brakes. Train routes & highways are close together here, and the sound is like a semi brakes on steroids, so I was thinking more like brakes on factory mechanics. But if there was a nearby factory operating at night, it would be mentioned probably. But also, there are some WILD natural calls. And parrots exist and can put nearly any sound in any location with enough planning/coincidence. altho they usually lose interest in a sound much faster. But I was cracking up about aliens in the filbert orchards & we call em filberts too, I LOLd years ago when I realized the Nutella-induced hazelnut craze, which ppl were pretending was very posh, was just filberts. Delicious but hardly the epitome of European fancy heehee
Having had a car with messed up brakes it DEFINITELY sounds like brakes from some kind of vehicle. Train is my best bet too but I wouldn't be surprised if it was a truck or farming equipment or something. Even a regular car with really worn down brake pads can be close to that loud.
No that's definitely a giant hairy man with big toes that would definitely not make a deep grunting noise
Definitely not an animal tho
We almost lost the American beaver & we really should be more excited to see them!!! To me, the fact that the beaver population is nice and healthy and they take good care of our rivers and streams/ that’s way more exciting than making up chupacabra species. Beavers are adorable and very hard working! One of the best friends of humanity, quite honestly.
The what Beaver?
last time i checked Castor canadensis meant The Canadian Beaver just like Lynx canadensis means The Canadian Lynx
americanus means American, like Ursus americanus, The American Black Bear or americana means American like Corylus americana, the American Hazelnut
@@isaal-magyari9203news flash American beaver is a commonly used and accepted common name, stop being such a nerd about scientific names
@@Zepellin if a guy can't get nerdy about latin binomial scientific names what can a guy get nerdy about?
@@isaal-magyari9203 grow up kid ?
I’m so glad you didn’t title this “13 hOrRifYInG mOnsTerS cAughT oN cAmErA *nOt cLickBaiT* *dOnT WaTch aT 3 aM* *tRuE StoRieS*” or something stupid like that
This channel is always realistic and respectful. I'm glad for that.
Sometimes you gotta get some of those slop videos into your system
Because this is not the main topic of the channel. It's animals in general.
@@DD-et9ce I was just gonna say that title would've been much better 😅
No shi-💀🙏
The "chupacabra" is certainly a beaver, that's what I thought the moment I saw the pic. You can even see the tail!
The chupacabra is actually real, by the way. It's just a different breed of Mexican coyote that eats farm animals, yeah perhaps history overextended it
@@MusicBound the chupacabra is fake asf
@@JahirCallejastechnically it’s real, but its almost just a coyote, not a monster
@@JahirCallejasnah its just a fucking gone wrong
The Amarillo creature looks like someone tried (and failed) to replicate the artstyle of a Trevor Henderson monster. It looks really 2D to me in a way none of the other images in this video do. If it is an unaltered picture then it's definitely a person. The range of motion in the shoulders is way too flexible to be a dog, not that the "creature" even looks like a dog besides the head. This sighting would be wholly unremarkable if it weren't for the fact it was caught on a security camera, though that too could just be a publicity stunt (as you implied).
Edit: I am happy that, while you did include some of the more fantastical and unrealistic explanations for these cases, you prefaced when theories were less logically sound. There is also a good variety of logical explanations (or THE explanation for the cases that are solved, like The Bloop), which definitely preserves the mystery in a way that isn't "it was aliens/ghosts."
Trevor Henderson mentioned. A man of culture I see
It actually kind of does look like a Trevor creature tbh. The darkness, the low lighting, the mysterious aura of the creature, the bipedalism of a quadruped-type animal, the spookiness and eeriness the image gives off, and the way it creeps me out and gives me nightmares like every single Trevor artwork I’ve ever seen, makes this plausible. Buuut this is actually a real photo taken by security cameras at a zoo. (Sorry if this was too much of a mouthful) ^w^
I like to believe that its just a fursuiter
The "Chupacabra" is most likely a muskrat, not a beaver. They live around water and are often mistaken for beavers, but they have different tails (flatish, but thinner and hairy). They can also have lighter fur on the underside that sweeps up into the inner thigh, similar to the animal in the photo. Beavers are always a uniform color.
It would be absolutely amazing to see the giant gecko species still surviving somewhere. I mean, we have the body, it feels so near.
What about leachies?
I believe that still survive somewhere in deep forest, maybe the scientist havent found yet but nature is good for hiding something
@@Tailyn-b3zI’m pretty sure he explicitly said this gecko was 20 ish cm bigger than a leachie
@@rednamalas5079 ohhh my bad
Should find more bones eventually, but I don't think we're finding it alive. Mainland New Caledonia has a decent fossil record, so it's probably from one of the smaller islands around it.
if there's elusive species that only have 1 specimen and no fossil records makes you wonder what other amazing species have disappeared with no notice
The Untouchable Fish are another cool example of this. While many of them are likely to just be misidentified deep sea species, some of them are quite striking. The 4 foot dragonfish with 2 lures is the poster-child of this group of supposed fish, and yeah nothing like that has been seen since. Makes you wonder if some of these fish have since gone extinct, as we've dramatically altered the ocean's ecosystems. It's more likely they're just misidentified, but still.
There must have been many.
Umm I’ve always assumed that we only know about 20-30% of the animals who ever lived. But every year we find new ones, there’s plenty of fossils left to find in the massive public lands of the US West and paleo & archaeo digs occur literally every summer all over the west. The exciting news is that we’ll never stop discovering extinct species, we’ll never know everything but that’s Gods business anyway lol 😉
Only like 5% of all species fossilize, and only an even smaller percentage end up in the right time and place to be found, so probably hundreds of millions
If you're talking about the gecko, New Caledonia isn't really a good place for fossilization
Amarillo is a furry lol. For whatever reason took a 'shortcut' by the fence (Is there a trail by that area?) and triggered the camera. Then the city used the photo as publicity.
Our zoo is located in our biggest park right by a golf course and demolished water park. I certainly think it was a publicity thing to get more people to come to our *tiny* boring zoo. I personally believe they photoshopped one of their baby black bears
Yeah that’s what I think too
Yeah my family laughed at the headlines nobody in the city thought it was real
Nah bro that be my cousin Paul
He got that hair disease
It’s odd that it’s just one image in isolation. They don’t have a single other image of it coming or going? Nothing?
😂 best one is the one from recently with a Muntjac outside of a british Zoo with double exposed Ears, claiming it's some unknown winged Creature
Ok I just learned why a muntjac is! How did I never know of these? I love deer!!! But I’m cracking up, they kind of look like the jackalope, which isn’t really a cryptid (no one believes in it, they’re a cross between a jackrabbit/large hare and a pronghorn/american antelope, how would they even mate?😂), it’s more of a prank. We go looking for jackalope during the day, snipe hunting at night! But now I want to use muntjac photos to mess with people…
@@standdownrobots_ihaveoldgloryas a UK resident, I have been charged at by one, and had one living in my tiny garden next to a main road. They are invasive and annoying but also funny little creatures, we named our garden one "Monty"
@@standdownrobots_ihaveoldglory Jackalope perhaps = Rabbits/Hares with Papillomavirus.
I always find the Thing with the Snipe Hunt funny, acting as if it's a made up Creature when those are Birds that actually exist
Bro the Amarillo City creature is clearly someones fursona
Yeah I've always thought it looked like a Furry suit.
@@martinharris5017 it looks like a poor quality homemade one, like the ones you see in early 90s recordings of cons lol. Guy was probably just too embarrassed to say "hey that's me".
whatever that sound was in Forest Grove, it made my snuggly, purring cat stop grooming herself and STARE at my computer like I have never seen
Same with my cat. but thats maybe because its already a hurting sound. Or maybe because it sounds Like a Break so they think its danger cause they know cars.
yeah my cat didn't like it ether. She just straight up got up and walked away
Its a very harsh, loud sound I actually had to turn my phone volume down. So it makes sense it probably hurts their ears
It hurt my ears too
The turtle pond one could also have been a gar. Long nosed Gar are not uncommon and breathe air, even when the water is plentifully oxygenated. If they had sent the photo to ichyologists, they probably wouldhave gotten this answer.
I thought gar too
23:11 That's very likely not a Wallaby. They do not move their back legs independently to walk. The feet are not right either. It's likely a dog or fox.
It's a deer stretching it's hind legs. The 'tail' is a hind leg.
@@herstoryanimated not in the first picture
@@piretiris8223 yes it is, it is alternating stretching it's hind legs, like it just stood up from lying down - one photo is one back leg, the other is the alternate.
@@piretiris8223 ruclips.net/user/shortsLq9vX_RGhuk?si=wqibmWIkhn0cGK9R like this but it does one after the other.
@@herstoryanimated it's got two back legs and a tail
99% sure tis a fox. About the right size, skinny tail, blackish ear tips
My first thought with the Oregon sound was a violin. Definitely didn't sound animal-like to me.
Such a fun video!
It sounded more like a siren to me than anything.
@@MarshalMarrs-eu9yh i believe its some weirdly loud power tool like some wood saw
For me it sounded like some sort of machine or maybe wind blowing into something? Idk
In the shorter clips of the sound I'd heard before it sounded like it could've been organic, but in the longer clip in this video it certainly sounds artificial. I'm not an expert, but the long, sustained shrill sounds more like machinery to me than an animal cry. It's still a really neat mystery; imagine hearing metallic shrieking for a few nights and then it never happens again. So odd.
Yeah that definitely sounds man made
The Bloop sound is played faster than the original. So it is actually an iceberg.
Most of underwater sounds circulating the internet are the speed up version. To make our brain make out something that isn't really there.
I believe it was sped up to become audible for us
8:24 "that bigfoot was living in the area" - and stole a french horn
LMAOO😭😭
Awesome video….. loved the segment about Borneo creature. Whether it’s the marten or the squirrel, still an a great find on the camera trap.
That may not be a wallaby in Scotland, thanks to its hind part and legs. They're too slender for a wallaby. It's most likely a fox with some condition that has caused it to lose its fur on its tail.
That was my exact thought too
It’s almost always a mangy fox. Chupacabras, thylacines, etc. mangy fox 😂
Those himd legs look very deer-like
Australia here 🇦🇺, that's NOT a Wallaby !!
Wallabies rear legs don't move independent to each other and are much more muscular than this animal.
They're also a lot furrier.
It's very obviously a medium size well fed, short haired dog.
Do not count out big cats here in the UK! Although I will preface this with I'm not talking Lions & Siberian Tigers 😄 I've had 3 person experiences. 2 are connected & explained, 1 was very odd & is a bit more believe it if you want to!
Living in the middle of nowhere, lots of farmland & patches of woodland. My friends & I would go on crazy long walks, explore the woodland, the occasional disused army base, that kinda thing. We saw a pretty decent sized cat, it had a shaggy mane, really long tail! A bit bigger than my lurcher. Tried to film it, tried to take pics nothing particularly clear. We told EVERYONE!
Then a few days later, the farmer that owned most of the land had told a few people he'd shot & killed a big cat he'd never seen before as it had attacked & killed multiple lambs. So a few of us went to his farmhouse & BEGGED to see it! Sure enough it looked like what we'd seen, he ended up paying a BIG Fine that he was really not happy about haha. Turned out it was an extremely rare species of Lynx that are almost never seen in our area, it was male so they think it was pushed out of a territory & made it's way into ours.
The other? On a train to Cornwall to stay with my buddy who moved there. People on the train start pointing, raised voices WTF IS THAT!? There was someone walking their dog along the top of a steep hill & at the bottom I would describe as stalking, really low set, crouch walking almost? Long, Black, Chunky Rounded Head & a reaaaaaally long tail. Everyone was quite excited we saw the beast of bodmin Moore (miles from Bodmin btw 😄)
@@pirate_duck4985 That's great, but the animal was NOT any sort of cat...
@@edwardfletcher7790 Not wanting to start an argument before I continue as I'm genuinely wondering what it is!!
You don't think Wallaby? I'm not sure it's a dog, I can see what you mean but where it is, the time & the fact it looks in good condition unless the dog got out accidentally? Someone wouldn't let a dog like that just go stray at night.
The Tail is what bugs me, my family has Lurchers as I mentioned. The leg muscle, general build? Could absolutely be a Deerhound/cross, they have that wirey fur we can see in the stills. Maybe the camera angle/position is distorting it a little? The tail looks disproportionately long, aka more cat like!
@@pirate_duck4985 One already given multiple reasons who is not a Wallaby...
@@pirate_duck4985 the back leg/foot conformation is absolutely not a cat. it's too small. The animal in the image has a very obvious, defined toe pattern that is very, very canine.
7:29 is the evil noise ending if anyone else hates that noise
19:32 I had no idea there was even a gecko THAT large. What an adorable unit!
Thank you for these videos! My 3 year old and I love to watch them whenever we can. We always learn something new.
Too bad they are gone long before we have awareness about how unique they are and should be protected, make thing even sadder is we know so little about it
@@KENSHIROez3260 hey, ya never know, there’s a _chance_ they’re not. We thought crested geckos were extinct for ages, before finding out we were just looking in the wrong location. Apparently they’re from around the same area, right? So maybe they’re hanging out somewhere, waiting to be found again. It’s not likely, but it’s more plausible than a thylacine, and I still hope that those are secretly still around. 🤷♀️
@@thatonepossum5766 I really hope you will turns out to be correct eventually, I would be happy if I was wrong
24:39
ETA: Did some asking around. It’s a red fox. This is a molting red fox. Case closed.
Interesting… It’s definitely not any carnivore-type animal (feliform/caniform).
It’s not any dog, fox, wolf, or any of their relatives because the hind end is shaped completely incorrectly. The tail is held very stiffly, held in a way for balance whereas animals in the Canis category don’t use their tails like that. Foxes do, but even a mange fox’s tail is not held so stiffly, and it’s too long compared to the body.
It’s not any cat because again, incorrect body proportions. And while most, if not all cats hold their tails out for balance, it’s still too stiff and oddly shaped for any kind of climbing or even balance when running, remember, cats run on all fours.
I was going to point out that they’re right it could be a wallaby, but even rock wallabies, the ones you mentioned were released, hind feet don’t look like that. They are long, while this animal’s feet are small paws like a cat’s. And while the body slopes down slightly, it’s not as steep as any large marsupial. And the ears seem short and wide. It seems the hind legs are longer than the forelegs, but it seems from these pictures the weight is distributed evenly, and the forelimbs are too long for any large marsupial either.
But - it DOES look like a marsupial. And more specifically, it’s gonna sound crazy and I highly doubt that it’s even possible since it’s from Tasmania and is also extinct - it looks like a Thylacine, without the stripes of course.
Thylacine are marsupials, but have a carnivore-like body shape as they filled a similar niche. But upon researching Thylacine, the peculiar, dog-like way they move, hind end is sleek and you can see the bone area. The entire body is long and lanky. Tail is stiff and is held off the ground for balance, similar to the way kangaroos and wallabies hold their tails. The muzzle seems very long like the Thylacine’s.
While I don’t think the Thylacine is still alive, this would be incredibly striking evidence if it was in Australia or more notably, Tasmania. I am still in awe of this animal’s conformation. The only evidence I could find for the Thylacine even being able to exist, apparently there was one in a zoo in Glasglow, Scotland, and apparently there have been more “reports” on Thylacine in Scotland. So while it may be possible, albeit incredibly unlikely, there seems to be a small chance. And an even smaller chance given the animal in question seems to be greyish or tannish in coloration with light undersides.
Honestly, I’m stumped on this one. 😅
I was watching a video on the Montauk Project that a youtuber I follow posted just last week (for Halloween) and she started talking about the Montauk Beach monster and how no one has any idea what it is, and I'm just like "it's a racoon, hun. It's just a racoon"
24:34 it’s definitely not a wallaby as the animal in the picture walks on its toes like a dog. It’s probably a fox that just isn’t fluffy or has mange.
7:20 - someone gave a child an alto saxophone.
The Forest Grove Sound (yah for Forest Grove, Oregon, love the place) sounded mechanical to me. The beaver seemed obvious as a beaver too. And the final one looks like someone in some strange clothing, a person. Fun video.
i applaud you bringing out video after video, all interesting and informative. thank you
People say that everything is a "mutant" when there are only very few possible mutations per animal. It's not like there's a recessive gene in the iguana genome that is related to fire breath and flight.
No way…. I’m from Forest Grove I had no idea you had a connection there!
Imagine causing a ruckus in your community by deciding to operate your tablesaw super early in the morning.
I wish those giant geckos could be rediscovered 😭 i keep reptiles including 2 mourning geckos. geckos are awesome.
That forest grove sound is like my mtb disc brakes on a wet day.
There’s so many things that could make that sound I’m not amazed.
Surprisingly good video, throughout RUclips’s history videos like this are 80% just slop
My parents used to both work at Plum Island and I can assure you the island didn't lab create the monster lol but they do regular testing for hoof and mouth disease and shoot anything that washes up on the island as a heath safety protocol.
1:06 It looks like a diseased koala
Wait… you're telling me that some dude's trail camera snapped a photo of a beaver and people genuinely thought that it was a chupacabra?…
Yip
The bloop is literally just a piece of ice breaking.
0:24 wth is this lmfao
He's chill dw
William Afton in Spring Bonnie suit chasing kid who got out of pizzeria
Looks like a wolf man with a killer thigh gap
shinto hypno's lullaby
its totally her
It’s called a Blimpet
imagine hearing a noise that obviously sounds like a faulty alarm and jumping straight to bigfoot
yea those mystery apes invented smoke alarms centuries ago but forgot how to make batteries so it constantly malfunctions
The Amarillo Zoo creature looks like the fricking Lorax I swear
your like nukes top 5 or bizarre bub except much more reasonable and grounded in reality. i like it!
These October videos have been great! You’re the best in the RUclips game
The "Forest Grove sound" sounds like it's time to get the local train crew to oil their brakes.
Chupacabra made me audibly say "bruh." We've proven it to be a coyote time and time again, honestly one of the goofiest cryptids. Also, I'm fairly certain that's a wallaby. I used to work with them and their silhouette is unmistakable
The forest grove sound is very reminiscent of my brakes when I don't put enough brake fluid in the engine. I wonder if it's either a malfuntioning rotor or turbine of some sort, or some other mechanical issue.
Topic suggestion: the kangaroo herd of Wyoming (it’s a 4/1 story but if the website is still available, WY Fish&Fur did an incredible job!).
7:01 are there pipes under this place? because my bathroom tap sounds exactly like this when someone else is using the kitchen tap downstairs, also it being underground could explain it being "hard to pinpoint"
Whatever that high pitch noise was, it made my cat get up and start looking around like crazy
13:53, was this picture taken near a river or a lake?
The Forest Grove sound just sounds like somebody created a feedback loop on a megaphone or one of them loudspeakers used for warnings
THANK YOU SO MCUH ALLABOUTNATURE YOU MAKE MY DAYS SO MUCH BETTER, I LOVE WATCHING YOUR NATURE VIDEOS THEY ARE SO COOL AND I LOVE ANIMALS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! KEEP ON COOKING KING
"the hairless animal with skin is actually a turtle without it's shell"
People still trust the news...
Not disagreeing to be mean but look at the lower jaw. I believe there are teeth. I think that it is a normal animal exposed to the salt water and normal weathering. I am just not sure what kind of animal. As for the news, I trust very little of them from ANY side of the political sphere. Lol, be well and God bless.
@@wYatt121509 what
@@hypnotised-clover No offense. I see the sarcasm in your post on review. I mistook what you meant. My bad.
Bless their hearts
How do you not have millions of views?, your videos are really awesom🎉
12:40 I think he's right about it being a Fisher, I think it's captured in mid run - so it's body looks compacted as the hind legs catch up to the fronts.
If the zoos security cam was motion activated (or video, really the only two options) then there would be multiple pics of the alleged creature. Def seems like a small zoo trying to gain more traffic
very interesting video ! more of this type of mystery animal video pls
Snapping turtle posing as alligator!! 😂 Snappers are MEAN, he was probably plotting against someone in the pond. And yeah NOAA channel is awesome!
I remember a lot of people said the last one was a furry (like something in a fur suit)
Plus the cloud/sky noises is interesting, but also scary if you don’t know what it could be
13:45 a Beaver! since the beginning!
It literally has the teeth to 😂
@@jaimecooper2945How can you tell?
THANK YOU
@@blenderbender5582you can see them from the side.
Looks like the spotted owl has become a mystery animal too. Only one left in the Canadian wilderness.
That is not Bigfoot or anything like it on the suggestions. What everyone is hearing in Forest grove, it's some old emergency service siren that was malfunctioning. Sounds exactly like our emergency services siren when it gets stuck where I live, the high end, then it not going down to the lower pitch.
Fisher looking thing ... well it is a fisher, but a pregnant one or I like your theory of it being a beaver.
Thanks for the video! Really interesting theories!
Loved this. Thank you!
10:29 lmao Groudon vs Kyogre
I think the concept of cryptids exemplify people's lack of science education and critical thinking.
It's frustrating to see people insist crytids exist based on blurry photos and witness testimony from people who could be lying or mentally ill.
Just the blurry photos and videos alone make me laugh. The majority of people on earth have a device that can easily capture pretty good quality visuals and audio, if you're only finding blurry garbage it's because it was intentionally made blurry (or it was made years and years ago and was then picked to be used later)
I live next to a pond in FL, I have both alligators and turtles in it. That “Chi alligator” is definitely a turtle.
I always thought the montauk monster looked like a mildly squish-faced dog. Nothing near the level of a bulldog, but maybe a boxer.
Also: my cat REALLY did not like the Forest Grove Sound.
I’m an absolute sucker for these vids
12:40 Beaver
Beavers drag their broad, flat, naked, tails.
It’s a porcupine. 100%
Gigarcanum is so fascinating to me, I wonder if there’s even a chance there might be some still around today in the most remote areas of New Caledonia. Exciting stuff to think about
The "new carnivore" is definitely the Thomas's flying squirrel
I'm not saying I'm a reliable source, but when I saw the second animal I *instantly* thought "squirrel" so I'm gonna put my bet on the flying squirrel hypothesis.
Also PLEASE add a warning for that third one on my god, I was not prepared for the physical fucking pain of that screeching.
the bloop didnt even sound like the sound everyone is familiar with. the one we know as bloop is very sped up and pitch shifted, while the original sound is muuuuuch slower and in such a low frequency that you cant really hear it. it's practically never brought up and it sucks because people still say it cant be just an iceberg or whatever, because they have only heard the version that is sped up and pitch shifted.
7:03 isn't that just someone moving a broken car?
25:18 BAHAHAHA xD Noway man! That’s just some guy in a Fursuit!
Can you make a video on Pernambuco Pygmy-owl? It hasn't been seen since 2001.
That would be cool. There is not even a single video about that owl.
Forrest Galante need to bring back his show
Forest Grove sounded like an elk/caribou ngl
That sound was made by air wing blown through some type of metal chamber (dog whistle etc)
Y’all be going insane with these monster noises or images, *NO GUYS.* Majority of these would’ve been found already- obviously especially the met (though it was around 40-80(?) feet long) also! We find Meg teeth guess where? SHALLOW DRIED UP RIVERS or 20 FEET DOWN RIVERS-
Any update on the golden orb?
12:22 - beaver
Same
Ikr it is a freaking beaver
Literally, it’s so fcking obvious it’s a Beaver.
People can’t be this stupid
I'm an Aussie, as soon as I i saw the 'scottish big cat' photo in the title card I thought it was a kangaroo. Showed it to my family, saying simply that it was taken in Scotland and is suspected to be a big cat. Every single person said something along the lines of 'looks like a kangaroo' or 'how did that get there' (i.e. obviously a Kangaroo). It's a kangaroo or wallaby for sure, almost certainly the rednecked wallaby (though i have been given to understand that sometimes people in the UK keep kangaroos/wallabies as pets, and it could be an escaped pet of a different species. I'm not knowledgeable enough to be able to tell more than the main species apart at a glance).
Great video. Always love this kind of thing. Sure the last one is a hoax. Would be wonderful if they had a trip to New Caladonia to find the Giant Gecko! Al the best, John.
3:41 reminds me of a coatundmi, but the squirrel explanation is waaaaay more likely
4:35 I feel like I've seen something like this before when I was in New York on Vacation.
It could have been something that looked similar.
Jeez, I don't know man but I think the last creature looks just like your local furry in a fursuit.
The chupacabra is 100% a porcupine they look pretty weird after they lose their quills in a fight with something and they do infact have long tails you just can’t see them when the quills are there
That Peak District animal is just a bloody fox with skin disease… There used to be one just like that regularly coming to my front door and sleeping on the doormat, they can look ghastly without their fur haha
My cat really didn’t like the forest grove sound, he was trying to find it
I think that Amarillo object is just some tattered plastic sheeting blowing in the wind
The Forest Grove sounds exactly like a harmonica lol. Someone is playing just one note on their mouth organ 😂
A train whistle more likely since there are tracks quite close to the town. Under the right conditions some sound waves can travel for 10 to 100 of miles
@@ルカ写真撮影 That's true. We have both a dockyard and train lines a good few kilometres away from where I live and on winter nights when there aren't as many sounds, you can hear the whistles from both.
22:52 Exceptionally large mangy scottish wild cat?