Bigfoot Skull Found in Utah? Appearance, Size and Everything You Need to Know
Utah Man Claims He Found a Bigfoot Skull, Experts Said it Was Just a Rock
It was like Utah resident Todd May was drawn to what he claimed was the skull of Bigfoot, which he found during a hike near his residence in Ogden.
May said that he would usually look for fossils and rocks in the same area. "I looked around for about half an hour, then I saw it," he said referring to the skull convinced that it was of a Sasquatch since sightings of Bigfoot in the locality were common.
The Utah resident seemed very much interested with the idea of Bigfoot that when he saw the 75-pound rock-like object, he immediately considered it the skull of the apelike creature. May also claimed that he almost encountered Bigfoots twice in his lifetime.
"The first time I saw one I was startled, it looked like an ape from the zoo," he mentioned in the Times Record News report. He claimed that he saw the second one at the Ogden Canyon area when he visited the place really hoping to see another Bigfoot.
The term, according to BFRO, refers to an imaginary wild man that walks like a human but with features of an ape. Various sightings of this creature have been reported in various parts of the world.
Because of these sightings, May was convinced that he indeed stumbled upon the skull of a Bigfoot. He said that the object he found resembled the facial structure of the the two Sasquatch he saw in the past.
He added that he was shocked to find the so-called skull which he said looked like the head of an ape in a zoo. Aside from the rock-like object, the same report said May does not any have other proof that the fabled creature was seen in his locality.
Experts, on the other hand, doubted the authenticity of the so-called Bigfoot skull. Midweaster State University Assistant Geoscience Professor Jesse Carlucci mentioned that May's discovery was simply a rock. The professor was certain about this after he saw the photo of the object.
Carlucci explained that it was normal for a rock to form like a skull over the years. "Often, the natural fractures or joints in the rock are sites of increased weathering, where you have these types of depressions form. It's not Bigfoot!" he explained. He also noted that a skull could not be that hard but should have been fragile.