tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16505569.post8806554382076847712..comments2024-01-05T05:02:20.353+00:00Comments on CRYPTOZOOLOGY ONLINE: Still on the Track: OLL LEWIS: 5 QUESTIONS ON… CRYPTOZOOLOGY - ALAN FRISWELLUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16505569.post-50038160873365070812010-01-30T13:08:46.635+00:002010-01-30T13:08:46.635+00:00Interesting thing about Sanderson's Mokele-mBe...Interesting thing about Sanderson's Mokele-mBembe sighting is that it was basically an everyday-ordinary-Lake Monster-HUMP sighting and no more determinative than that. Personally I think he saw a large sirenian but he was already hearing rumors of an uncaught "River whale" at the time. Sanderson SAID it was the top of something's head and larger than the whole body of a full-grown hippo. Frankly I have no idea why he even thought such a thing, but that could never be a Sauropod. A Pliosaur perhaps, but never a Sauropod. The more likely explanation would be that it was the back of a more normal aquatic animal: and the tracks-even the supposed bite marks on the Jungle Chocolate fruits-would have been due to something else unrelated to it.<br /><br />The argument about dinosaurs needing large amounts of food definitely also relates to the Mokele-mBembe as well: if that is a standard herbivorous Sauropod and confined to small territories around certain ponds, then it would be eating enormous quantities of vegetation from around those ponds. It would look as if a plague of locusts had gone through there.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com