TO SOMEONE WITH BIOLOGICAL TRAINING, ONE OF THE MOST irritating and frustrating aspects of dealing with claims about “strange” and “weird” paranormal creatures is the widespread lack of knowledge about basic anatomy and biology. Nearly every hairless canine (whether a coyote or a feral dog) is immediately identified as a “chupacabra”—simply because most people don’t recognize an animal without its hair. Likewise, waterlogged, hairless, or partially decomposed bodies of raccoons and other mammals are treated as bizarre alien creatures because most people are not familiar with the process of bodily decay. Decomposed basking sharks and other marine creatures are the source of all sorts of sea monster myths. The list of cases goes on and on, saturating the internet with bogus claims. None of the authors of these sites ever consult anyone with the proper scientific training before jumping to paranormal conclusions.
In preparing an upcoming book about aliens and UFOs, Prothero and Callahan stumbled across two particularly obvious examples of this kind of error, often found in books and on websites that present odd objects as proof that aliens have visited earth. Both cases are simple mistakes in anatomy by people who don’t know the first thing about human and animal skulls. And in both cases, the mistakes and misinterpretations were spread all over the internet as proof of paranormal phenomena without anyone challenging them.
The Rhodope skull