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| Subject: | | Re: New research lends credence to thunderbird accounts? |
| From: | |
hroth
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posted
Wed, Sep 16 2009, 1:58pm
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How interesting! I think large birds are one of the least likely cryptids, but you gotta love local lore. |
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| Subject: | | Re: New research lends credence to thunderbird accounts? |
| From: | |
MJLehde
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posted
Wed, Sep 16 2009, 10:50pm
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Alton is just around the river bend from me so I know the story well. That mural used to be further up the river at a spot where every year the boyscouts would repaint it by repelling down the cliff. One year sonmebody, who didn't even have a kid in scouting, brought a suit claiming that it was too dangerous and forced the scouts to stop repainting the mural. The city replaced it withb a giant a metal image that hung on the cliff in it's place, it looked about as authentic as that u-tube video where the bigfoot flips the camera the bird, and finally the mural was repainted where it is now. The original painting was at a place on the river that no longer exists. While I love the legend I've never thought it any sort of evidence that Thunderbirds were real. |
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| Subject: | | Re: New research lends credence to thunderbird accounts? |
| From: | |
Ursustyrannis
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posted
Mon, Sep 28 2009, 2:10am
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The Paisa may have been a bull shark. Very exaggerated but then again, for a people with virtually no natural predators, the bull shark might have spawned great legends. |
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| Subject: | | Re: New research lends credence to thunderbird accounts? |
| From: | |
MJLehde
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posted
Wed, Oct 7 2009, 6:16pm
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I'll grant that Bull Sharks have been known to go up the river as far as Alton and that legends like tales grow in the telling, but even so the whole "flying thing" is hard to get away from if you're trying to make a shark the source of the story. |
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