The Strange Science of Implausible Creatures

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024

Комментарии • 266

  • @ThoughtPotato
    @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +42

    Get the exclusive NordVPN deal here (nordvpn.com/thoughtpotato). It’s risk free with NordVPN’s 30 day money-back guarantee!

    • @nogo6880
      @nogo6880 2 года назад

      I like baked potatoes

    • @pilarrosanas5085
      @pilarrosanas5085 2 года назад

      Imagine a less spectacular, but interesting weird cryptids..like a 30 cm descendent from ictiosaurs, who evolved and loocks to similar to fish who whas mystaked by a fish..or a 10 cm pterosaur with feathers who was confused to bird..xD

    • @alexanderstottlemyre3679
      @alexanderstottlemyre3679 Год назад

      I'd like to say that the description of the row sounds quite similar to Saltasaurus, given the description of a long neck and bony plates, the only thing that denies the theory is the beak, but the beak part could have been an exaggeration or something else.

  • @juanitaschlink2028
    @juanitaschlink2028 2 года назад +563

    My father in law told me he saw a hoop snake when he was a boy in the Sierra Nevada mountains in spain. He was alone, he watched it roll down a hill. Freaked him out, He hates snakes and had never heard the term "hoop snake" but insists he saw it. He said he was upset than when he went home and told his family and no one believed him. He was much relieved when I told him it was, indeed, (kind of) a thing.

  • @kartoone4120
    @kartoone4120 2 года назад +188

    I read a book titled 'The wizard's beastiary', I believe. It detailed several theories about how such mythological animals could exist.
    The 'unicorn' was a large goat with a specially cultivated horn.
    The loch Ness monster, was speculated by the author, to possibly be a very large sea slug that had adapted to a fresh water environment. This explained it's ability stay underwater for extended periods (which pleisaurs couldn't do).
    And explained the 'bumpy protusions' on its head, (actually eye stalks).

    • @JustanOrdinaryTomatoKay
      @JustanOrdinaryTomatoKay Год назад +4

      Oh man I wish I could find that book!

    • @PantyQueenie
      @PantyQueenie Год назад +9

      I have a book as well that is similar that shows the bone anatomy of mythological animals and their flaws called "The Resurrectionist" and the cover image is a skeletal angel

    • @octogonSmuggler
      @octogonSmuggler Год назад +7

      There are actually some breeds of horse which have knots where a horn might have been in ages past. It has been theorized that some horses had horns at one point, but, much like the elephant and the rhino, those horns shrunk over time due to poaching.

    • @hereticalpaintjobs
      @hereticalpaintjobs Год назад +4

      Wasn't the unicorn just the rhino but explained very very badly?

    • @kartoone4120
      @kartoone4120 Год назад +1

      @Bruce Wayne that's the great thing about mythology - speculation is abundant.
      See that rhino over there? It actually could be a weird horse with a horn sticking out of its forehead.
      Far fetched is the norm. 🙂

  • @jackkraken3888
    @jackkraken3888 2 года назад +35

    I love the concept of Skybeasts as ridiculous as they sound, huge creatures apparently lighter than air and exist in their own ecosystem as predators and prey.

    • @r.connor9280
      @r.connor9280 Год назад +6

      Dude you ever read the book "Airship" ?
      Got a creature called a Sky Cat that's pretty cool and the sequel "Skybreaker" digs more into the idea of sky beasts

    • @jackkraken3888
      @jackkraken3888 Год назад +6

      @@r.connor9280 No but thanks. I'll look into that.

  • @dracorex426
    @dracorex426 Год назад +29

    The Hoop Snake would not necessarily need to have an actual stinger in order to wield a poisoned dagger. If it holds its tail spike in its mouth before striking, it could simply be depositing venom onto said tail weapon.

  • @PersonOfRandomnesss
    @PersonOfRandomnesss 2 года назад +46

    9:36 I legitimately burst out with laughter at that much needed clarification.

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +16

      Haha I’m glad someone caught that!

  • @thoughtfuldevil6069
    @thoughtfuldevil6069 2 года назад +151

    I always loved the Cryptozoologicon, it hugely influenced my first novel, "Jackie and Craig."
    I've always wanted volume II, even though it seems like it's never going to come :'(

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 2 года назад +5

      How are sales going?

    • @thoughtfuldevil6069
      @thoughtfuldevil6069 2 года назад +12

      @@dubuyajay9964 Decent! They go in and out, I guess like everyone who isn't Stephen King lol

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 2 года назад +4

      @@thoughtfuldevil6069 Are you in Barnes and Noble?

    • @tudoraragornofgreyscot8482
      @tudoraragornofgreyscot8482 Год назад +2

      @@thoughtfuldevil6069 What’s it about?

  • @navybluegacha2119
    @navybluegacha2119 2 года назад +170

    FINALLY SOMEONE COVERED CRYPTOZOOLOGICON OTHER THAN EDGE
    I loved the book and its scientific attempts and takes on speculative cryptids and I'm excited for its 2nd book coming sometime soon!

    • @LowTiertoji
      @LowTiertoji 2 года назад +4

      When will it be out?

    • @navybluegacha2119
      @navybluegacha2119 2 года назад +3

      @@LowTiertoji Cryptozoologicon 2 is very early into the works as of some few months

    • @enriqueramirez0615
      @enriqueramirez0615 2 года назад +2

      Very little artworks from that 2nd book volume had made it online including "The Ropen", "Trunko" and "Hagan creature"

    • @navybluegacha2119
      @navybluegacha2119 2 года назад +1

      @@enriqueramirez0615 WAIT
      Hagan?

    • @enriqueramirez0615
      @enriqueramirez0615 2 года назад +2

      @@navybluegacha2119 that the name of a cryptid that was wash up on a beach.

  • @wlg2677
    @wlg2677 Год назад +3

    In my country Honduras there are 4 criptids.
    Sisimite: A smallish ape man whose feet are turned backwards (yep, that is right).
    "Zumbadora" snake: Serpent that bites de ground and strikes animals and people with its tail and body (Didn´t even belived this as a small kid I figured it is impossible for a snake for lift its whole body)
    Come Lenguas: A drake like creature which coils around livestock´s necks asfixiating them when the victims tongue´s sticks out the "Comelenguas " devours the tongue killing the animal.
    Timbo: Pig like creature that eats corpses from cementeries.
    Danto: Based in real Tapirs, but fantasized as larger, armored, with a horn and unable to make sharp turns (Basically a rhino imagined by people who have never seen one).

  • @Resomius
    @Resomius 2 года назад +9

    "A large Opossum" may be the best describtion ever given to the Cubachabra

  • @PaleoAnalysis
    @PaleoAnalysis 2 года назад +6

    Did he just segway from the Chupacabra into a NordVPN sponsorship ad?
    ...That's a talent right there. 😂

  • @ben-ty9jo
    @ben-ty9jo 2 года назад +63

    As a New Jersey resident I have to wonder if the Jersey devil is in this book? Its a really interesting cryptid with a lot of different interpretations, some speculate that it was just a colonist who saw a crane in bad light and the legend caught on from there but there are a lot of different anthropological explanations as well
    Also, listening to Thought Potato is so chill that I don't skip his ads. Loving my new manta sleep mask btw lol

    • @brianmurphy250
      @brianmurphy250 2 года назад +2

      I checked out the book on the Barnes and Nobel website, and it doesn’t seem to. If you go to the BN website, they offer a preview of the first few pages and it has the table of contents. It has a lot of foreign names I don’t recognize. It did have Goatman but no Jersey Devil.

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +17

      Ayyyy my guy! Glad to hear you enjoyed the video (and the ad). Unfortunately the Jersey Devil isn't in there... I wish that one was covered! Maybe part two? I'd also love to see some more from the Appalachia region covered (mothman?!).

    • @ben-ty9jo
      @ben-ty9jo 2 года назад +4

      @@ThoughtPotato for sure, a lot of the rural areas up there and even in south jersey/delaware valley have a crazy amount of folklore, I took an anthropology class about it a few semesters ago and we talked about how the jersey devil could have originally started as a rumor to discredit this one family, its very interesting stuff to think about how we weave these monsters into being... unless they're real to begin with🤔

    • @B_4035mn
      @B_4035mn Год назад

      @@ben-ty9jo The Jersey Devil could be an over interpreted recently undiscovered or completely undiscovered species of giant fruit or possibly giant carnivorous bat, possibly hunted to extinction or starved to death.

  • @bugtalk84
    @bugtalk84 2 года назад +144

    Even to this day, we're still discovering many new species every year.

    • @Mr_Zx
      @Mr_Zx 2 года назад +15

      Big foot anit real kieth.

    • @danger_floof
      @danger_floof 2 года назад +38

      And they are small weird fish, shrews, frogs, butterflies, bacteria, etc. They aren't goddamn cryptids.

    • @ekosubandie2094
      @ekosubandie2094 2 года назад +1

      I want something like New Guinean Thylacine or Malagasy hippo
      Not another lizards or bugs though

    • @danger_floof
      @danger_floof 2 года назад +4

      @SomeFukinPeep I mean this book is just some fun exercise in speculative evolution. One of the people who worked on this is a very influential paleontologist.

    • @trinidaitobago2
      @trinidaitobago2 2 года назад +5

      New species of LITTLE creatures, not big ones like those in the video.

  • @LacieWhy
    @LacieWhy Год назад +2

    Everyone always forgets that the Loch Ness is home to large eels. The Hoop Snake was something new to me.

  • @brutusmagnuson315
    @brutusmagnuson315 2 года назад +231

    I mean, how do you define cryptozoology? We discover new species regularly, and a few myths like gorillas, giant squid, coelacanths and frilled sharks, along with numerous others turned out to be real.
    I guess a stubborn fixation on animals unlikely to be real based on local ecology? I feel like there needs to be separation between people believing in monsters, and people wanting to figure out if certain animals exists, or can exist in certain habitats.

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +71

      That's a very good point. It's maybe too broad of a term at times, especially when it overlaps with mythology and folklore, which seems to (and maybe shouldn't) happen a lot.

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 2 года назад +12

      @@ThoughtPotato that’s the thing is most of the common cryptids don’t fall under mythological in the sense that I don’t think a Kappa or something more spiritual is usually considered but the Jersey Devil is supposed to be like a demonic monster thing and that clashes with others in its field which generally come up to be weird animals like an ape man or a flipper monster

    • @ladykoiwolfe
      @ladykoiwolfe 2 года назад

      I consider it cryptozoology if it's feasible for the creature to exist and to exist in the given location yet be unproven.
      If the creature has a biology unlikely to allow the creature to actually survive, then I consider it mythology.
      If the creature is a mix if common local creatures, its folklore. Another consideration is if it's a weird spirit realm creature that still interacts wtith humans. That's still folklore.
      And if its somehow a dinosaur in modern times its probably a corrupted source.
      I want to believe in dragons and fairies as much as I want to believe in Nessie and Bigfoot.
      Honestly, Bigfoot is the only one I think has a chance.

    • @thearmchairspacemanOG
      @thearmchairspacemanOG 2 года назад +8

      you define it by looking up the etymological roots. - it's the study of ''hidden creatures''.
      When we find enough evidence one - we hand it off to the ordinary zoologists.

    • @didack1419
      @didack1419 Год назад +4

      @@thearmchairspacemanOG The etymology is often irrelevant to determine what we mean by a concept. What matters is what we really mean and what makes practical sense to be used as a concept.
      What do we even mean by "hidden creatures" regardless? Because cryptozoologians are always looking at folk tales and testimonies, that's their methodology, they're not searching with probes underwater. We don't call marine biologists that look for new species "cryptozoologians", ever. If it started now, it would get too confusing, unnecessarily.

  • @mrwoodchuck94
    @mrwoodchuck94 2 года назад +37

    Interesting to see all the different work C. M. Kosemen did

  • @goatsandroses4258
    @goatsandroses4258 Год назад +5

    El Chupacabra = FrequentlyCoyotewithMangeitis Americansus, a different species from those in other areas. As for the Kelpie, I think it would be cuter to be an offshoot of the Shetland Pony that, due to its extremely harsh island environment, gradually adapted wading into the water and then submerging to eat seaweed and other water plants. At some point, these ponies, caught up by storms, were carried to the mainland and ended up in other bodies of water. These ponies generally wade in relatively shallow water, raising their heads to breathe through slightly tubular nostrils. They've also developed some type of sticky, water-repellent coating to protect their coats. The pony's winsome nature and large eyes attract children. As the pony has lived so much of the time underwater, it has lost its natural fear of a large cat leaping onto its back (which is why most untrained horses buck.) Having lost the natural bucking reflex, and having no fear of humans as predators, children can easily climb upon it and become stuck to its back. The "pony" then submerges to resume "grazing," unaware that its rider does not possess a natural snorkel. The pony does not consume its luckless rider, but this is accomplished by other water scavengers.

  • @erendiranigarcia8326
    @erendiranigarcia8326 2 года назад +7

    native americans: wow look at these drawings of people our ancestors made! fascinating, it helps me feel connected w them :)
    white americans: actually it's of bigfoot

  • @beardedricotheold2640
    @beardedricotheold2640 2 года назад +4

    11:28 "no amphibious horses"
    Hippo enters chat

    • @archravenineteenseventeen
      @archravenineteenseventeen Год назад +1

      There's also carabao or water buffalo in my country and in most southeast asia

    • @tijanamilenkovic3425
      @tijanamilenkovic3425 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@archravenineteenseventeen Neither of them are horses, carabao is a type of cow 🐄 and hippopotamus is closer to the pig 🐷, whale 🐋 and dolphin 🐬 😂

    • @AmyHelenHughes
      @AmyHelenHughes Месяц назад

      ​​@@tijanamilenkovic3425wrong - Hippopotamus, if you go by naming convention, as opposed to actual genetics, are absolutely water horses.

  • @nyetloki
    @nyetloki Год назад +5

    Hoop snakes don't have venom glands in their tails. They have it in their mouth and biting their tail also has the benefit of coating the tail spike in venom for attacking

  • @XYZdude00
    @XYZdude00 2 года назад +15

    I live near those bigfoot drawings in California. Seeing a statue of it at the local reservation without knowledge of the drawings is a bit shocking

  • @WisdomThumbs
    @WisdomThumbs 2 года назад +14

    The thumbnail looks like the little snake my granddad saw fall off a train by our house. It grabbed its tail in its mouth like an ouroboros, landed in the middle of the road, and rolled away into the ditch. When he got out of his truck to take a look, thinking the snake was a strange rubber ring, the snake unfurled itself and slithered away.

    • @DrakonHype-1-
      @DrakonHype-1- 2 года назад

      Snakes do indeed tend to eat themselves like that. We don’t know exactly why, but we theorize it’s because of low body temperature or stress.
      A video of this: m.ruclips.net/video/puKevC5boFg/видео.html

  • @sapphirewingthefurrycritic985
    @sapphirewingthefurrycritic985 2 года назад +13

    Aside from the fact that the neck of a pleisiosaur couldn't bend like that, a reptile that big couldn't live in such a cold place. That and no one could agree on what the hell the Loch Ness monster looked like.

  • @Petey0707
    @Petey0707 2 года назад +2

    "..The answer is a resounding; maybe."
    lmao that was a pretty good build-up.

  • @benracer
    @benracer 2 года назад +13

    So, an interesting thing I found out is that one time in history, there was a hoop snake "sighting" in my county

  • @UwU-xk5cx
    @UwU-xk5cx 8 месяцев назад +1

    For kelpies, I'm impressed they didnt just say "moose without antlers"

  • @Arseniy_Arsenicum
    @Arseniy_Arsenicum 2 года назад +8

    With every video of yours, my library grows larger and weirder...

  • @uhohspaghettios3801
    @uhohspaghettios3801 2 года назад +73

    I think it's entirely possible that some bigfoot-like creature did exist at some point, but humans would've either hunted them to extinction or out competed them for resources

  • @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick
    @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick Год назад +5

    How is the physics of the Hoop Snake’s tail strike meant to work?
    If it’s rolling forward, on what is essentially its back, would it not be easier for it to unravel itself, and use its moment to launch its MOUTH forward rather than its tail?
    And considering that it’s…a snake, I think that it’s far more likely to inject venom via bite more than anything else.

  • @n42more25
    @n42more25 2 года назад +4

    The " bat " type of chupa Cabral could be vampire bats.

  • @ALiberalVeteran
    @ALiberalVeteran Год назад +1

    We deployed to eastern Afghanistan at the foot of the Himalayan mountains and I saw video of guys shooting at a large bipedal, furry primate thing, and as the guys shot rounds at it, it just kept on walking without reacting.

  • @coffeecartoons5345
    @coffeecartoons5345 Год назад +1

    C.M. Koseman making Sky Rods a real thing
    Hirohiko Araki in 2002 “I’m a four parallel universes ahead of you”

  • @texben123
    @texben123 Год назад +2

    The chupacabra is a coyote with mange also half dog and half coyote hybrid.

  • @uhohspaghettios3801
    @uhohspaghettios3801 2 года назад +7

    I feel like a lot of chupacabra sightings are probaby just coyotes with mange or something like that

  • @Chewbaccafruit
    @Chewbaccafruit Год назад +3

    What a treat this channel is

  • @atimidbirb
    @atimidbirb Год назад +1

    I love the Kelpie explanation!!

  • @jeromietolbert1866
    @jeromietolbert1866 2 года назад +2

    The elders tell us to leave these creatures alone for the sake of people involved and the future of the species not everything should be brought to the light

  • @rottenredhead6009
    @rottenredhead6009 2 года назад +15

    My problem with the chupacabra is the fact I haven't seen one goat corpse... Don't you think at least one farmer would've took at least one photo of a goat corpse. For like idk evidence.
    If you show me a genuine photo of a goat completely dry, I'll start believing.

    • @virutech32
      @virutech32 2 года назад +5

      Nah but there are photos of drained goats though. Least i remember seeing one in an old cryptid show. Can't remember which but i it kinda doesn't matter since the operative word here is genuine & that's a lot harder to prove for really old photos. Not to mention that it's not like it's all that hard to either stab or drain a goat so even a properly genuine photo doesn't really prove anything other than that someone took a pic of a bloodless goat

    • @rottenredhead6009
      @rottenredhead6009 2 года назад +1

      @@virutech32 that's totally true

    • @tijanamilenkovic3425
      @tijanamilenkovic3425 Год назад +1

      @@rottenredhead6009 chupacabra needs to be a dark, dark normal, dark ghost or dark poison type pseudolegendary pokemon wouldn't you say

  • @wrendina9996
    @wrendina9996 2 года назад +6

    What a fantastic video, god I want that book

  • @ryonhatcher4561
    @ryonhatcher4561 2 года назад +4

    I hope there's a sequel to this video, cause this is interesting!

  • @bradywomack9751
    @bradywomack9751 2 года назад +28

    Since the 70’s we’ve had satellites that can read a license plate but no images of Bigfoot, Nessie, African Dinosaurs, or Honest Young Earth Creationists.

    • @bradywomack9751
      @bradywomack9751 2 года назад +1

      Com’on y’all. I collect mental lapses of sense (Muslim and all non cannon Christians com’on). I had a response that a millipede was the walking snake in Eden. I corrected his misinformation on classification and pointed out the basic information of differences between Arthropods and Reptiles and never once called him bad names. Well fuck I do cuss but no obscene names.

    • @tijanamilenkovic3425
      @tijanamilenkovic3425 Год назад +2

      @@bradywomack9751 wouldn't you like to see mokele mbembe as a grass dragon, water dragon or ground dragon type pokemon and Zuiyo Maru monster as a water ghost or dragon ghost type pokemon maybe a regional variant of hydreigon or lapras or dragalge or brand new pokemon alltogether

    • @bradywomack9751
      @bradywomack9751 Год назад +2

      @@tijanamilenkovic3425
      Yes. Crytids make great elements for storytelling and gaming. I think the romantic aura of this even having a minuscule chance of being real is what makes this so unresistable.

    • @charlie4039k
      @charlie4039k Год назад

      Maybe some of those creatures are animals with low population or too dangerous that's why authorities are keeping them a secret, or something?

  • @andrewmoreno9414
    @andrewmoreno9414 2 года назад +4

    Commenting for the algorithm gods, love your stuff.

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад

      Much appreciated, the gods be praised!

  • @kweebecnode8463
    @kweebecnode8463 2 года назад +9

    @Thought Potato can you make a video about Brazilian cryptids? I just think some of them are very cool and deserve a video of their own

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +2

      I love that idea. I'll see what I can do!

  • @rodpolintan6533
    @rodpolintan6533 2 года назад +2

    Cupacabra is definitely fake. There's 3.9 million people on an Island that is 100 by 30 miles wide

  • @Americanbadashh
    @Americanbadashh 9 месяцев назад

    "Always seem to evade capture" After just showing a coelacanth, a former cryptid that we have since captured

  • @thearmchairspacemanOG
    @thearmchairspacemanOG 2 года назад +2

    Kelpies aren't shapeshifters, whoever told ye that was talking out of modern fiction rather than myth, they're aquatic and can mesmerize you, but they're horses.. always horses.

  • @purplehaze2358
    @purplehaze2358 2 года назад +7

    Hearing someone claim bigfoot is a gigantopithecus is kind of ridiculous to me. Like, gigantopithecus was MUCH larger, distinctly lacked a bipedal gait for the most part, and was closely related to orangutans. It's like Grover just wanted an excuse to claim a prehistoric animal is still alive, and tried to draw similarities between it and a cryptid when, simply put, no such similarities exist. At least, no similarities that exceed superficiality.

  • @Thelightofgnosis
    @Thelightofgnosis 5 месяцев назад

    For the kelpie I would of suggested a missing link between the dolphin and its horse-like ancestors that had lung’s capable of spending long periods underwater.

  • @ExtremeMadnessX
    @ExtremeMadnessX 2 года назад +2

    11:42 So basically how ancestors of whales start evolving.

  • @channeling764
    @channeling764 2 года назад +6

    Forrest Galante mentioned that the Chupacabra were basically inbred descendants of 4 Tasmanian Tigers that escaped from a zoo in the Bronx

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +2

      Now that sounds interesting...

    • @channeling764
      @channeling764 2 года назад +1

      @@ThoughtPotato I think it was said on the Joe Rogan Podcast.

    • @dubuyajay9964
      @dubuyajay9964 2 года назад +2

      Where were they for 70 years then?

  • @rapgsolano
    @rapgsolano Год назад

    The nordvpn segway from the chupacabra was something else

  • @amyliz_2297
    @amyliz_2297 Год назад +1

    How do you have less thank 200k? Your videos are amazing!!

  • @frosttheicefloeturtle8143
    @frosttheicefloeturtle8143 Год назад +1

    5:29 I think that even an even more plausible explanation then the one given is that it's simply a hairless undiscovered species of canid, probably belonging to the genus Canis or Vulpes, that evolved to become sanguivorous. That seems a lot more likely then a large predatory marsupial, now I'm not saying that's impossible, but considering that the VAST majority of marsupials are endemic to Australia, and the most common chupacabra sightings taking place in Mexico, Puerto Rico, Texas, and Maryland, the marsupial idea seems less likely. again not saying it's bad, I just think that the undiscovered canid idea seems way more plausible

  • @snsnwj-s5k
    @snsnwj-s5k Месяц назад

    I like to thing of chupacabras as Large vampire bats that lost their wings and adapted a semi-bipedal, standard quadruped gait

  • @stixvane
    @stixvane 2 года назад +2

    The problem with these myths is that, like the Paterson film, people come out on their death beds the film and pictures are fakes...

  • @matthewrosa7262
    @matthewrosa7262 2 года назад +4

    He Took Photographs...,... But We Got a Painting...(?)!-It Looks Like An Old Blue Oyster Cult Album Cover!

  • @freedem41
    @freedem41 Год назад +6

    Why not tell the story of the two criptids that turned out to be real. The maned wolf and the fox-cat.

  • @blaster23456
    @blaster23456 2 года назад +2

    It’s funny to me that my first introduction to sky fish is from Jojo’s bizarre adventure

  • @the-trustees
    @the-trustees 2 года назад +4

    As far as Nessie goes, the surgeon who took the infamous photo of Nessie admitted as he was dying that it was a piece of wood only 18 inches long. 🤪

    • @joshuasanford1110
      @joshuasanford1110 2 года назад

      Y u here if u don't believe sheep

    • @the-trustees
      @the-trustees 2 года назад +1

      @@joshuasanford1110 I think it is important to debunk as many arguments for unproven animals, gods, etc. as possible. People who believe nonsense for bad reasons have been, and always will be, the most dangerous examples from our sad, credulous and unworthy species.

    • @joshuasanford1110
      @joshuasanford1110 2 года назад

      @@the-trustees naw all cryptids real why u think the government try to cover everything up think moron

    • @naldinhotiradentes8538
      @naldinhotiradentes8538 Год назад

      @@the-trustees nothing debunks them , no Matter how convincing your arguments are, its ignorants that Can’t see the bigger picture the real example of “your sad race”

    • @the-trustees
      @the-trustees Год назад

      @Naldinho Tiradentes Nice assertion. Since you have no evidence to support it, I need no evidence to dismiss it. I sure hope that wasn't your best "argument" because if it was... let's just say I'd empathize if you zealots weren't such lying, evil Dunning-Kruger poster children.

  • @Achlys99
    @Achlys99 2 года назад +2

    I’m currently writing a book, that deals in scientific evolution of cryptids and mythical creatures in the modern world

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +1

      Sounds super interesting to me

    • @Achlys99
      @Achlys99 2 года назад

      @@ThoughtPotato thank you! Already have science explanation pages for a handful of monsters including the thunderbird, kappa, cockatrice, basalisk, chupacabra, and Baku. It’ll be a novel with story and all but every chapter has a few monster science pages

  • @leafheart3213
    @leafheart3213 Год назад

    I read this great book that speculates the evolutionary history of Bigfoot and it’s relation to humans along with being a really good book about survival and a commentary on modern life. I think it’s called devolution or something along those lines. Great read

  • @MimikyuCookie
    @MimikyuCookie 2 года назад +6

    For the Hoop Snake, perhaps the “stinger” simply coats itself in the venom found in the mouth? That’s my hypothesis anyway.

    • @ThoughtPotato
      @ThoughtPotato  2 года назад +2

      Oh, I like that! It would make a lot of sense

    • @jennyrose9454
      @jennyrose9454 2 года назад

      I had a coloring book as a kid with mythology one was amphibians aka hoop snake

  • @BigBossMan538
    @BigBossMan538 2 года назад +1

    I hope the second volume releases in my lifetime

  • @ezekeaI
    @ezekeaI Год назад

    The fog has consumed.
    The fog has taken.
    The fog has claimed.
    The fog is all.
    The fog is here.
    The fog is now.
    The fog is my home.
    The fog is my prison.
    The fog is my tomb.
    In the fog, I am bound.
    In the fog, I am lost.

  • @MySerpentine
    @MySerpentine Год назад

    I've always been fond of kelpies.

  • @johnfischner2189
    @johnfischner2189 2 года назад +1

    I must buy this book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

  • @dmwanderer9454
    @dmwanderer9454 2 года назад +4

    Flying rods are my favorite because I remember actually STUDYING them as a kid. Just the concept of Rods and Mega Rods (giggity) is so cool to me, giant flying insects(?) that are so fast they're imperceptible.

    • @captainsensiblejr.
      @captainsensiblejr. Год назад

      'Flying rods " are the product of early generation slow shutter digital cameras which could not cspture single point in time mages of moving.objects which they can only register as a smeared image. So called flying rods are just slow shutter speed smeared images of birds with the multiple wings being the flapping of multiple bird wing beats per second.

    • @dmwanderer9454
      @dmwanderer9454 Год назад

      @@captainsensiblejr. Well yeah I know that now but as a kid it was still an unknown thing, and I did like an elementary school project on them

  • @the-trustees
    @the-trustees 2 года назад +4

    The thing about most of these mythical creatures is that you'd have to believe that a single specimen has existed for more years than they should and for whatever reason, there are never any young ones spotted. When a myth gets older than even a drastically lengthened potential lifespan, it becomes clear that their mythical status is correct.

    • @changsangma1915
      @changsangma1915 2 года назад

      .....specimens that exist as possible sub surface entities wouldn't necessarily make its young ones explore the surface world, considering the underground world isn't the most explored area by humans it becomes even more likely. The only thing is the guesses of scepticism is just as good as the believers.

    • @the-trustees
      @the-trustees 2 года назад

      @@changsangma1915 There are more logical fallacies in your reply than there are sentences, so no reply is necessary. This is a courtesy to apprise you of this and i suggest/recommend that you search the web for "logical fallacies" and use that list to determine the specific ones in your reply.

    • @changsangma1915
      @changsangma1915 2 года назад

      @@the-trustees .... Pff Logical fallacy....very cute way to flex your bloated ego to say "your words mean shit cause I feel I'm always f* right". If it weren't for your prick attitude response I wouldn't be compelled to shit back. I guess some individuals just ask for it.

    • @changsangma1915
      @changsangma1915 2 года назад

      @@the-trustees ....what, no words to construct with your big brain moment you pull off?! cause well you must be so full of yourself that its the best form to keep that ego really high seated- staying silent. The treatment you need.

  • @topguntk870
    @topguntk870 2 года назад +1

    if universe is infinite or there are infinite universe then every imaginable creature exists somewhere. everything imaginable must exist someplace out there.

  • @DaniMartVTen
    @DaniMartVTen Год назад +1

    As for Bigfoot,
    *Rhinopithecus Canadensis.*

  • @Miles7955
    @Miles7955 Год назад

    A hoop snake?! I'd totally own one of these!

  • @codybostic7512
    @codybostic7512 Год назад +1

    I feel so weird I can see dragonfly look like snake half bug. I was 10 year old scary run away like 5 min. I come again, but it gone. I don't know of my life.

  • @musicobsessive123
    @musicobsessive123 Год назад

    9:36 "*pictured on the right" fucking sent me

  • @brendanthedreamer
    @brendanthedreamer 2 года назад +7

    I'd add The Skinwalker being adapted, as I'd imagine it would be some kind of predatory feline which could mimic the sounds of its prey.

    • @kaelang12
      @kaelang12 2 года назад +2

      i'd be careful there. the skinwalker is a bit of a contentious subject due to its history of being appropriated by people who don't understand the cultural connotations of it. same goes for the wendigo

    • @tijanamilenkovic3425
      @tijanamilenkovic3425 Год назад

      @@kaelang12 both skinwalker and wendigo need to be pokemon maybe a duo of legendary pokemon with skinwalker being dark, dark normal, dark psychic or dark fairy type and with wendigo being dark ghost, ice dark, ice ghost, ghost fighting, dark fighting or ice fighting type

  • @evilgenius97
    @evilgenius97 Год назад

    Im still looking for this 4 to 5 inch tall/ wide very fast spider i seen in 2nd grade. It doesnt exist and ive never found proof it could be native to downriver Michigan

  • @general-Lee-700
    @general-Lee-700 Год назад +1

    Iv heard of a legend of a killer tribe of killer apes called blood monkeys

  • @Chocoboranger
    @Chocoboranger Год назад

    Why do people assign Bigfoot/sasquatch to various prehistoric animals? We have no idea what happened to neanderthal. They just disappeared. Why not admit neanderthal could have full body hair and admit they could very well still walk the wilds?

  • @huhihuh
    @huhihuh 2 года назад +1

    I wasn't sure who was he talking about untill he assured me it wasn't the dog

  • @braden47664
    @braden47664 2 года назад +1

    Holy moly he's right I am matter! 😨😱

  • @storyspinner4166
    @storyspinner4166 10 месяцев назад

    Please could you do the ecosystem of the Abyss from Made in Abyss?

  • @enriqueramirez0615
    @enriqueramirez0615 2 года назад +1

    I have the book and explore these critters.

  • @liothetitanhunter7959
    @liothetitanhunter7959 2 года назад +2

    How do you spell that turtle dinosaur's name?
    I thought it was Mokele-mbembe

  • @a.kitcat.b
    @a.kitcat.b Год назад

    🐍Honestly, the hoop snake would be interesting, its like a real life pokemon-📕

  • @2012listo
    @2012listo Год назад

    The chupacabra is real. But not that creature as described. It looks like a thick, furry black snake with a cat-bat on the end.

  • @thelonesage3146
    @thelonesage3146 2 года назад +1

    Dude in the thumbnail is being attacked by snake wheel lol

  • @kingofspades6726
    @kingofspades6726 2 года назад

    as soon as i heard the name C.M Kosemen i knew this would be good

  • @MLGodzilla
    @MLGodzilla 2 года назад

    Thank you

  • @andy-1998
    @andy-1998 Год назад +1

    Video idea werewolf biology...

  • @chancegivens9390
    @chancegivens9390 2 года назад +1

    I'm skeptical about alot but I know sasquatch exist.

  • @zacmarulo8721
    @zacmarulo8721 2 года назад +3

    How would the chubacabra suck blood so effectively? What's the mechanism?

    • @theultraatomicgamer
      @theultraatomicgamer 2 года назад +2

      Easy, just look at vampire bats

    • @diegoquezada3193
      @diegoquezada3193 2 года назад +4

      @@theultraatomicgamerThey don't suck blood though, if I remember correctly their saliva works to make it so the victim doesn't feel pain on the area which is then scraped by their teeth, then the blood which comes out is lapped up by the bats.

    • @theultraatomicgamer
      @theultraatomicgamer 2 года назад +1

      @@diegoquezada3193 Yes that what I was talking about.

    • @diegoquezada3193
      @diegoquezada3193 2 года назад +3

      @@theultraatomicgamer Ah I see, that certainly is plausible, but the Chupacabra generally doesn't use the scrape method like vampire bats though. Maybe it could have pressurized fangs that allow it to suck up blood through the veins and arteries of its prey, and it somehow ends up in the stomach.

    • @samuraijackoff5354
      @samuraijackoff5354 2 года назад +1

      My guess is that it doesn't suck blood, rather the blood pooling is a natural process of something dying.

  • @boiledteetllc
    @boiledteetllc 2 года назад +2

    My dad told moon crickets were real I been looking for real crickets turns out it's a racial slur

  • @Milko-xk5wt
    @Milko-xk5wt 2 года назад +2

    Just judging by a name I fought it was some kind of crypto currency related game with NFT animals

  • @khaiasaurus2595
    @khaiasaurus2595 2 года назад +1

    at 13:00 I thought this man was about to reveal the cryptid Sonic the hedgehog 😂😂

  • @tylercreative3096
    @tylercreative3096 2 года назад +4

    can somebody explain the creature I met Last Night? I was really nervous last night and I believed there was this creature that kept of running away from my line of sight. Just out of sight each time. this is not the only time I've met this creature but let me know your thoughts by Replying. I think I'll term it "The Eye-Leaver".

  • @jennyrose9454
    @jennyrose9454 2 года назад

    You guys ever visit the crypto zoology museum?

  • @infinity2636
    @infinity2636 2 года назад

    Love the videos

  • @Sam_Sam2
    @Sam_Sam2 2 года назад +4

    Let’s go cryptozoologicon

  • @lordbendtner6404
    @lordbendtner6404 2 года назад +2

    Ancient astronauts theorists say

  • @ceresofthestars
    @ceresofthestars Год назад

    i mean if snakes can fly they can probably w h e e l as well

  • @jeremyelbertson4427
    @jeremyelbertson4427 Год назад

    Gigantopithicus blacki made me spit take with my vape