
New at the Frontiers of Anthropology:
http://frontiers-of-anthropology.blogspot.com/2012/02/palaeolithic-extinctions-and-taurid.html
New at the Frontiers of Zoology:
http://frontiersofzoology.blogspot.com/2012/02/more-abominable-maps.html


We are getting an increasingly high profile in the murky world of Big Cat Research. This has good, as well as bad knock-on effects.
The hunt for British Big Cats attracts far more newspaper column inches than any other cryptozoological subject.
24 drawing pins / thumb tacks in the shape of the legendary loch ness monster of Scotland, UK.Secure stuff to your walls with the mythical creature, that's been nicknamed "nessie" since the 1950's.Currently selecting a manufacturing partner, follow @_dshott or subscribe to the newsletter to be notified when they arrive...

Had I not become a zoologist, I may well have sought a career in archaeology, as I have always been fascinated with ancient civilisations and the many extraordinary monuments, edifices, and other spectacular creations that once existed in those bygone realms - of which the following example is a particular favourite of mine
One of many little-reported cryptozoological birds in need of an identity is Zululand's mysterious kondlo - a large, black, fowl-like bird that incited a considerable conflict of opinion within the pages of the periodical African Wild Life during the early 1960s, yet which nowadays is all but forgotten.