Thunderbird
From: http://www.parascope.com/en/cryptozoo/predators10.htm
The strange case of the Thunderbird is unique in the study of unknown
animals, because it contains two mysteries in one: the search for
a long-lost and probably nonexistent photograph of the creature
has virtually eclipsed the search for the creature itself.
The Thunderbird is a part of Native American mythology in tribes
of the Pacific Northwest and the Great Lakes. These giant, birdlike
creatures were said to generate lightning from their eyes and to
cause thunderclaps by flapping their massive wings in the sky. There
are countless sightings on record of the revered supernatural entity,
or a huge bird fitting its description, both by Native Americans
and the "white man."
The most celebrated Thunderbird encounter took place in 1890, on
the desert sands of what was then the Arizona Territory. Two cowboys
had a bizarre confrontation which has varied widely in the telling,
but the gist of the story is this: they saw a giant flying bird,
shot and killed it with their rifles, and carried its spectacular
carcass into town.
A report in the April 26, 1890 Tombstone Epigraph listed the creature's
wingspan as an alarming 160 feet, and noted that the bird was about
92 feet long, about 50 inches around at the middle, and had a head
about eight feet long. The beast was said to have no feathers, but
a smooth skin and wingflaps "composed of a thick and nearly
transparent membrane... easily penetrated by a bullet." Perhaps
the hardest part of this story to swallow is that two horses could
manage to haul a dead behemoth like this for any distance.
Sounds like a typical tall tale of the Wild West, and that's probably
what it is. But it apparently does contain a kernel of truth. In
1970, Harry McClure claimed that as a boy he knew the two cowboys
from the story later in their lives, and they had told him a different
version of the events. McClure said the giant bird they saw in the
desert actually had a wingspan of more like 20 to 30 feet -- much
more reasonable than 160, but still enormous. The two riders shot
at the creature, but it was out of range. Their spooked horses refused
to chase it, so the men rode into town empty-handed, carrying only
news of the one that got away.
The Tombstone newspaper printed its highly embroidered version
of the cowboy's sighting, which was spared from fading into obscurity
by its inclusion in a 1930 book on the Old West. In 1963, the story
came to the attention of writer Jack Pearl, who revived the tale
for an article in a pulpy men's adventure magazine called Saga.
As if the Epigraph report hadn't spiced up the facts enough already,
Pearl liberally embellished the encounter into a dramatic rip-snorter
entitled "Monster Bird That Carries Off Human Beings!"
Pearl pushed the date of the encounter back to 1886, and he described
the witnesses as two prospectors who killed the bird and proudly
showed off their trophy in Tombstone. Pearl also added some extra
conflict by telling of a how a second Thunderbird snatched up a
heckler who had ridiculed the prospectors and flew away with him
in its talons. But Pearl's most significant editorialization was
this: he said that the Epigraph newspaper story had run with a photograph
of the giant bird's carcass, nailed up to a wall with its mighty
wingspan unfurled, and a number of men posing next to it for scale.
This part of the legend, the Thunderbird photo, has taken on a
life of its own. Pearl's fictional account of a photograph of Old
West settlers with a big dead bird was picked up and repeated time
and again, multiplying and evolving just as it had before Pearl
ever got hold of it.
In time, people who heard the story began to believe that they
had previously seen the photo with their own eyes. Somehow, people
felt convinced that they had once marveled at the strange picture
in some old book or newspaper, often noting that they didn't realize
the significance of the photo at the time, and regretting that they
had not kept it. The details might differ from one recollection
to the other, with some recalling the bird had feathers and others
saying it looked more like a pterodactyl, and some thinking the
bird was nailed to a wall and others remembering that it was held
with wings outstretch by a large group of men. But no matter what
the specifics, each person feels certain his or her memory is true.
Many have reported that they saw the Thunderbird photo in FATE
Magazine, National Geographic, Grit, or some other similar publication,
but entire archives of these periodicals have been searched, and
no Thunderbird discovered. The experts in the cryptozoology field
are no less susceptible to Thunderbird recollections than the common
layman, with Ivan T. Sanderson and John A. Keel among those who
claim to have once held the photo in their hands. Some accounts
of seeing the photo are amazingly precise and hard to disregard.
Larry Thomas told Strange Magazine that he saw the photo in a library
in the early 1980s, as an adult, in a thin hardcover book of photography
from the Old West. He says that he was so fascinated by the picture
that he looked at it dozens of times over a four-year period, and
he even checked the book out once so he could take it home for his
wife to see. (The illustration on this page is based on Thomas's
recollection.)
It's difficult to tell someone that an experience as vivid as that
never really happened, but what is the alternative? What's the word
with the Thunderbird?
The best explanation for the phantom photo phenomenon is that these
are memories of things that never existed. It might simply be that
people have read descriptions of the cowboys and the giant bird
that were so colorful and evocative that their imaginations created
a near-tangible mental image of the scene. As the controversy surrounding
"false memory syndrome" has demonstrated, the things we
think we recall can be distorted by external suggestion, mismatched
fragments of things that did happen, and maybe even debris from
the collective subconscious. Some might view this line of reasoning
as party-pooping skepticism, but if it's correct, what it reveals
about the mysteries of the human mind is way more interesting than
any big bird could ever hope to be.
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