Introduction
Throughout the
twentieth century, thousands of eyewitness reports of giant bipedal apes,
commonly referred to as Bigfoot or Sasquatch, have emanated from the montane
forests of the western United States and Canada. Hundreds of large humanoid
footprints have been discovered and many have been photographed or preserved as
plaster casts. As incredulous as these reports may seem, the simple fact of the
matter remains -- the footprints exist and warrant evaluation. A sample of over
100 footprint casts and over 50 photographs of footprints and casts was
assembled and examined, as well as several examples of fresh
footprints.
Tracks in the Blue Mountains
The
author examined fresh footprints first-hand in 1996, near the Umatilla National
Forest, outside Walla Walla, Washington. The isolated trackway comprised in
excess of 40 discernible footprints on a muddy farm road, across a plowed field,
and along an irrigation ditch. The footprints measured approximately 35 cm
(13.75 in) long and 13 cm (5.25 in) wide. Step length ranged from 1.0 - 1.3 m.
Limited examples of faint dermatoglyphics were apparent, but deteriorated
rapidly under the wet weather conditions. Individual footprints exhibited
variations in toe position that were consistent with inferred walking speed and
accommodation of irregularities in the substrate. A flat foot was indicated with
an elongated heel segment. Seven individual footprints were preserved as
casts.
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Evidence of a Midtarsal Break
Perhaps the most significant observation relating to this trackway
was the evidence of a pronounced flexibility in the midtarsal joint. Several
examples of midfoot pressure ridges indicate a greater range of flexion at the
transverse tarsal joint than permitted in the normal human tarsus. This is
especially manifest in the footprint figured below, in which a heel impression
is absent. Evidently, the hindfoot was elevated at the time of contact by the
midfoot. Due to the muddy conditions, the foot slipped backward, as indicated by
the toe slide-ins, and a ridge of mud was pushed up behind the midtarsal
region.
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Patterson-Gimlin Film Subject
In
October 1967, Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin claimed to have captured on film a
female Bigfoot retreating across a loamy sandbar on Bluff Creek, in northern
California. The film provides a view of the plantar surface of the subject's
foot, as well as several unobstructed views of step cycles. In addition to a
prominent elongated heel, a midtarsal break is apparent during midstance and
considerable flexion of the midtarsus can be seen during the swing phase. The
subject left a long series of deeply impressed footprints. Patterson cast single
examples of a right and a left footprint. The next day the site was visited by
Robert Laverty, a timber management assistant and his sales crew. He took
several photographs including one of a footprint exhibiting a pronounced
pressure ridge in the midtarsal region. This same footprint, along with nine
others in a series, was cast two weeks later by Bob Titmus, a Canadian
taxidermist. A model of inferred skeletal anatomy is proposed here to account
for the distinctive midtarsal pressure ridge and "half-tracks" in which the heel
impression is absent. In this model the Sasquatch foot lacks a fixed
longitudinal arch, but instead exhibits a high degree of midfoot flexibility at
the transverse tarsal joint. Following the midtarsal break, a plastic substrate
may be pushed up in a pressure ridge as propulsive force is exerted through the
midfoot. An increased power arm in the foot lever system is achieved by heel
elongation as opposed to arch fixation.
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Noteworthy is the documentation of the tracks of this same individual on a number of earlier occasions. One of the first of these was photographed by Peter Byrne near Bluff Creek in 1960. Two others were cast by Al Hodgson, of Willow Creek, one on a logging road near Notice Creek in 1962(?) and another on Bluff Creek in 1963. Another instance was photographed extensively by John Green and Rene' Dahinden on the Blue Creek Mountain Road in 1967, just over one month before the Patterson-Gimlin film was shot.
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Additional Examples of "Half-Tracks"
A number of additional examples of footprints have been identified
that exhibit a midtarsal break, either as a pronounced midtarsal pressure ridge
or as a "half-track" produced by a foot flexed at the transverse tarsal joint .
Each of these examples conforms to the predicted relative position of the
transverse tarsal joint and elongated heel. The first example is documented by a
set of photographs taken by Don Abbott, an anthropologist from the British
Columbia Museum, in August 1967. These footprints were part of an extended
trackway, comprising over a thousand footprints, along Blue Creek Mountain Road,
in northern California.
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Photo credit: Dan Abbott |
Deputy Sheriff Denny Hereford was one of several officers investigating footprints found by loggers on the Satsop River, in Grays Harbor County, Washington, in April 1982. The subject strode from the forest across a logging landing, then doubling its stride, left a series of half-tracks on its return to the treeline. Note the indications of the fifth metatarsal and calcaneocuboid joint on the lateral margin of the cast. The proximal margin of the half-track approximates the position of the calcaneocuboid joint.
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Photo credit: Henner Fahrenbach |
Example of Foot Pathology
The
track of an individual with a presumed cripple foot was discovered in Bossburg,
Washington in 1969. The malformed right foot has been previously misidentified
as a case of talipes equinoverus (clubfoot). However, it is consistent
with the general condition of pes cavus, specifically metatarsus adductus
or possibly skewfoot. Its unilateral manifestation makes it more likely that the
individual was suffering from a lesion on the spinal cord rather than a
congenital deformity. Regardless of the epidemiology, the pathology highlights
the evident distinctions of skeletal anatomy. The prominent bunnionettes on the
lateral margin of the foot mark the positions of the calcaneocuboid and
cuboideometatarsal joints, which are positioned more distal than in a human
foot. This accords with the inferred position of the transverse tarsal joint and
confirms the elongation of the heel segment. Furthermore, deformities and
malalignments of the digits permit inferences about the positions of
interphalangeal joints and relative toe lengths, as depicted in the
reconstructed skeletal anatomy depicted below.
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Photo credit: Rene' Dahinden |
Relative Toe Length and Mobility
Variations in toe position are evident between footprints within a
single trackway, as well as between individual subjects. In some instances the
toes are sharply curled, leaving an undisturbed ridge of soil behind toe tips
resembling "peas-in-a-pod." In other instances the toes are fully extended. In
either case, the toes appear relatively longer than in humans. Among the casts
made by the author in 1996 is one in which the toes were splayed, pressing the
first and fifth digits into the sidewalls of the deep imprint, leaving an
impression of the profile of these marginal toes. This is the first such case
that I am aware of. Expressed as a percent of the combined hindfoot/midfoot, the
Sasquatch toes are intermediate in length between those of humans and the
reconstructed length of australopithecine toes. Furthermore, the digits
frequently display a considerable range of abduction.
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Compliant Gait
The dynamic
signature of the footprints concurs with numerous eyewitness accounts noting the
smoothness of the gait exhibited by the Sasquatch. For example, one witness
stated, "...it seemed to glide or float as it moved." Absent is the vertical
oscillation of the typical stiff-legged human gait. The compliant gait not only
reduces peak ground reaction forces, but also avoids concentration of weight
over the heel and ball, as well as increases the period of double
support.
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Photo credit: Roger Patterson |
Conclusions
Human walking is
characterized by an extended stiff-legged striding gait with distinct
heel-strike and toe-off phases. Bending stresses in the digits are held low by
selection for relatively short toes that participate in propulsion at the
sacrifice of prehension. Efficiency and economy of muscle action during distance
walking and running are maximized by reduced mobility in the tarsal joints, a
fixed longitudinal arch, elastic storage in the well developed calcaneal tendon,
plantar aponeurosis and deep plantar ligaments of the foot.
In contrast, the
Sasquatch appear to have adapted to bipedal locomotion by employing a compliant
gait on a flat flexible foot. A degree of prehensile capability has been
retained in the digits by maintaining the uncoupling of the propulsive function
of the hindoot from the forefoot via the midtarsal break. Digits are spared the
peak forces of toe-off due to the compliant gait with its extended period of
double support. This would be a efficient strategy for negotiating the steep,
broken terrain of the dense montane forests of the Pacific and Intermountain
West, especially for a bipedal hominoid of considerable body mass, The dynamic
signatures of this adaptive pattern of gait are generally evident in the
footprints examined in this study.