Dr. Jeff Meldrum and Dr. John Bindernagel goes Yeti hunting in Russia

Dr. Jeff Meldrum professor of anatomy and anthropology at
Idaho State University, Pocatello, USA
Dr. John Bindernagel, biologist, British Columbia, Canada
region where the creatures are said to live


October has been a busy month for Bigfoot researchers. With last weekend's Bigfoot conference in Texas and Oklahoma, and today's conference in Moscow, this is turning out to be quite the month for Bigfoot enthusiasts.

In Russia this week, researchers from all over the world are getting together for a Yeti expedition. Based on early reports Dr. Meldrum and Dr. Bindernagel have already given their talk this morning at the Darwin Museum.

So, where do they go from here?
After the exchange of information gathered during a many expeditions to places where unknown hominoids live across the world, the participants of the conference will visit caves in Mountainous Shoria district, where there are not only giant footprints similar to those of humans but also special markers left by the local Snowmen on their path.
According to reports, the preliminary conference went very well and the participants were flown off to Tashtagol in Siberia.

Yeti country: The conference is taking place in Tashtagol in Siberia,
in a region where the creatures are said to live

Government officials in Siberia are eager to prove the Yeti's existence after people in remote parts of the region claim to have caught a glimpse of the elusive being.

According to 15 witness statements by Siberian locals in the Kemerovo region, 7-ft tall, hairy, manlike creatures have been spotted wandering the Mount Shoria wilderness, with one man even claiming to have saved a yeti from drowning in a river while hunting.

Villager, Afanasy Kiskorov in Tashtagol reportedly witnessed the yeti activity first-hand. He said: “Their bodies were covered in red-and-black fur and they could climb trees. The creature was screaming in fear after falling into a swollen mountain river.”

Despite the alleged sightings, no photographic evidence as yet confirms the existence of the ‘abominable snowmen.’

However, hair specimens, large footprints and huge branch shelters in forests have fuelled scientific belief to traces of the yetis, described as the ‘Neanderthal ancestors of man.’

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