Notes

2: The Yeti Enigma

1. Rawicz, S. 1956. The Long Walk. Constable, Edinburgh.

2. Chase, S. quoted at: http://www.yowiehunters.net.

3: The Last Neanderthal

1. Greig. D.M, 1933, A Neanderthaloid Skull Presenting Features of Cleidocranial Dysostosis and Other Peculiarities, Edinburgh Medical Journal 40, 497.

2. Fleure, H.J. 1951. The Natural History of Man in Britain. Collins, London.

3. Howells, E. 2005. Good Men and True: The Lives and Tales of the Shepherds of mid-Wales. Capel Madog, Aberystwyth.

4: The Footprint that Shook the World

1. Hillary, E. and Doig, D. in Napier, J. 1972. Bigfoot. p.133, Jonathan Cape, London.

5: The Professor

1. Ward, M. 1997. Wilderness and Environmental Medicine 8, 29–32.

7: The Russian Almasty

1. Regal, B. 2013. Searching for Sasquatch: Crackpots, Eggheads and Cryptozoology. Palgrave MacMillan, London.

2. Halbertsma, T. 2011. ‘Mongolia's “Homo sapiens Almas”’, Kraken 2, 41–57.

8: The Godfather

1. Heuvelmans, B. 1969. Bull. Inst. Sci. Nat. Belg 45, 7–24.

9: Clutching at Straws

1. Coleman, L. 1989. Tom Slick and the Search for the Yeti, p.87, Faber & Faber, Boston.

10: Our Human Ancestors

1. Green, R. et al. 2010. Science 328, 710–22.

2. Abi-Rached, L. et al. Science 334, 89–94.

3. Pääbo S. 2014. Neanderthal Man: In Search of Lost Genomes. Basic Books, New York.

4. Krause, J. et al. 2010. Nature 464, 894–7.

5. Pääbo S. ibid. p.235.

6. Hammer, M. et al. 2011. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America 108, 15123–8.

7. Meyer, M. et al. 2014. Nature 505, 403–6.

11: Keeping it in the Family

1. Van Gelder, R. 1977. Novitates no.2365, 1–25, American Museum of Natural History, New York.

2. Bernolet-Moens, H. Ref to come.

3. Chilvers, H. 1930. The Seven Lost Trails of Africa. p.7. Cassell & Co, London.

4. Etkind, A. 2009. Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science 39, 205–210.

5. Heuvelmans, B. and Porchnev, B. 2011, L' Homme de Néanderthal est toujours vivant. Les editions de l'oeil du Sphinx, Paris.

14: Good Science, Bad Science

1. Meldrum, J. and Schaller, G.B. 2006. Sasquatch: Legend Meets Science, pp.266–7. Tom Docherty Associates, New York.

2. Milinkovitch, M.C., Caccone, A. & Amato, G. 2004. Molecular Phyogenetics and Evolution 31, 1–3.

3. Matthiessen, P. 1998. The Snow Leopard, pp.75–80. Vintage Books, London.

4. http://www.lanevol.org/LANE/yeti_3.html.

5. Coltman, D. and Davis, C. 2006. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 21, 60–1.

26: The Russians

1. Daily Mail Online. 12 February 2013 http//www.dailymail.co.uk/video/news/.../Is-proof-Yeti-sighting-Siberia.html

27: The Laboratory Reports

1. Fahrenbach, H. 1997. Cryptozoology 13, 47–75.

2. Meldrum, J. and Schaller, G.B. 2006. ibid.

3. The control region sequence of sample #25213 varied from the reference sequence at positions 16,234, 16,311 and 16,346, the last position being heteroplasmic.

28: The Ice Bear

1. Smythe, F.S. 1936. The Valley of Flowers. p.144. Hodder & Stoughton, London.

2. Brunner, B. 2007. Bears: A Brief History. p.64, Yale University Press.

3. Lindqvist, C. et al. 2010. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America 107 (11), 5053–7.

4. Talbot, S. and Shields, G. 1996. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 5, 567–75.

29: Zana

1. Bayanov, D. 1996. In the Footsteps of the Russian Snowman, pp.46–52, Crypto-Logos, Moscow.

2. Heuvelmans, B. and Porchnev, B. 2011. L'Homme de Néanderthal est toujours vivant. Les editions de l'oeil du Sphinx, Paris.

3. Koffman, J.-M. 1991. ‘L'Almasty, yeti du Caucase’, Archeologia 269, 24–43.