Bigfoot Leaves Footprints

By Staff

Bigfoot Leaves Footprints
A team of Japanese scientists has discovered footprints they believe were made by the legendary yeti said to roam the Himalayan regions of Nepal and Tibet.

Takahashi was speaking after he returned with his seven-member team from their third attempt to track down the half-man-half-ape, tales of which have gripped the imaginations of Western adventurers and mountaineers for decades.

"The footprints were about 20 centimetres (eight inches) long and looked like a human's," said Yoshiteru Takahashi, the leader of the Yeti Project Japan.

The team had set out nine motion-sensitive cameras in an area where Takahashi saw what he thought was a yeti during a previous expedition in 2003. "It was about 200 metres away in silhouette. It was walking on two legs like a human and looked about 150 centimetres tall," said Takahashi.

Despite spending 42 days on Dhaulagiri IV - a 7,661-metre (25,135-foot) peak where they say they have seen traces of yetis in the past, the team failed in their prime objective of capturing one on film.

"We remain convinced it is real. The footprints and the stories the local tell make us sure that it is not imaginary," he added. Photographs of the prints have been posted on the expedition's website. Despite their lack of success this time, the team plans to continue the quest. "We will come back as soon as we can, and we will keep coming back until we get the yeti on film," Takahashi said.


But, according to a report in the Telegraph, Takahashi said that the footprints were proof enough. "Myself and other team members have been coming to the Himalayas for years and we can recognize bear, deer, wolf and snow leopard prints and it was none of those," he said.