Left alone and protected
2007-02-16 20:40:33
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answer #1
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answered by TOokieTook 3
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I've always wanted to try a Bigfoot steak.......probably be really expensive because of how rare they are. Just kidding. I'm waiting for the day they find a Bigfoot......Lochness i'm not to sure about. The woods would be difficult to find things.....the lake with all of the scanning and sonar.......I think they would have found something by now. I think they should be left alone though. I don't even think we need to "protect" them.......we can't even find them over years on end.....so they'll do OK. Just pass a law stating it's illegal to kill a bigfoot and that'll probably do......and impose a very strong sentencing for those that do.......if anyone ever saw one again. I don't like seeing the animals at the zoo caged up.....and wouldn't like seeing a Bigfoot in there either.
2007-02-17 04:44:59
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answer #2
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answered by dylancv62 3
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I believe they are alive in this present age. Lochness became land locked, that was not always the case and who knows what became trapped in there? We know the Grand Canyon has herds of dwarf horses, They became cut off and remained as they were, why not the apatosauris or---Translations: A. Capture of a Nessie-like carcass. Trawled on April 25, 10:00 am at 43 deg. 57.5 min. S, 173 deg. 48.5 min. E [sic]. B. At the sea off New Zealand; Zuiyo-maru. C. 1. Red muscles remaining on the back of the trunk, overlaid by fat tissues. 2. There are 40-50 pieces of transparent, nylon-like cartilages roundish in cross section, around the tips and limbs. D. 3. Judging from the state of putrefaction, the animal may have been alive until about one month before acquisition. 4. Internal organs in the abdomen are damaged, eaten by worms or fish. 5. The lower jaw has been lost. E. Front view of the head (300 mm). F. Well skeletonized. G. Probably nostrils [sic]. H. Diameter of the [neck vertebral bone (200 mm). I. Red muscles; fat layers on them. J. Cross section of the tail. K. Cross section of the back bone (150 mm). L. No internal organs in the abdomen. M. Length. N. Diameter [of horny fibers?]. O. Length [of fibers] (200- 300 mm).
2007-02-17 04:53:10
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answer #3
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answered by Faerie loue 5
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I think capturing would be part of the proof - you'd then have a hard time convincing the capturer to let it go again. Hopefully they'd agree to e.g. tag it with a GPS device and release it into the wild.
2007-02-17 04:44:39
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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They should be captured because if they ever do find out they are real it will likely be in the future. Today, scientists are figuring out how to dupilicate an exact replica of living things and we do find them we can make more to study them. That is what i beleive.
2007-02-17 04:43:34
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answer #5
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answered by AllTimePlaya 1
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Left alone and protected.
But that's impossible cuz they would be too interesting for science not to be explored.
2007-02-17 09:10:23
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Left alone and protected. I hate zoos, cages and any other means by which men take away animals' freedom.
2007-02-17 04:47:13
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answer #7
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answered by Love_my_Cornish_Knight❤️ 7
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they should be left alone and protected, but what will happen is they'll be captured and studied and in time dissected.
2007-02-17 05:00:59
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answer #8
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answered by implosion13 4
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Well to survive they'd have to be whole breeding populations - there's hardly just going to be a couple - unless individually they're immortal.
How likely is it, do you think?
2007-02-17 10:08:49
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answer #9
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answered by Leviathan 6
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have a big cook out, just like the cave men did.
2007-02-17 04:41:07
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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