Beast Legends
Season One, Episode Five, Wildman of Vietnam
Original Air Date: Thursday, October 7, 2010
Episode five begins with Steve and Francis in southeast Asia to get the ball rolling on the teams research into the Vietnamese Wildman. Kathryn, Mike and Scott are back home in the Beast Lab researching the origins of the legend. The Wildman of Vietnam is said to roam the rainforests. The beast walks like a man, has superhuman strength and an appetite for flesh. According the Kathryn, the legend has been around for centuries.
First person accounts of the Wildman of Vietnam have been given by inhabitants of Vietnam as well as by American soldiers who fought on Vietnamese soil during the Vietnam conflict. One American soldier who was willing to tell the tale of what he witness during his tour of duty is Gary Linderer. Linderer was stationed in central Vietnam in 1968. He had been in country for approximately a month before encountering the Wildman. He was dropped into the jungle by helicopter before dawn. When the sun came up, he saw the creature. Linderer recorded his recount of his experience on video. Linderer describes the creature as being approximately 5'6"-5'10" tall and the eyes were very clear and intelligent looking. Mike begins constructing their creature by starting with the form of a man.
Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Zealand. Show all posts
Monday, October 18, 2010
Monday, October 4, 2010
US Television, Beast Legends, Episode 1.4 "Winged Lion"
Beast Legends
Season One, Episode Four, Winged Lion
Original Air Date: Thursday, September 30, 2010
In this weeks episode, the team researches and creates the winged lion, or as it is also known, the griffin.
Steve and Francis begin in Germany where they are searching for the bones while the rest of the team is at home in the lab researching the griffin legends.
The Griffin can be traced back even farther than Greek legends to Mesopotamia onward to the Mongolian area of Central Asia. Scott suggests that they break the project into two parts. Since there is an eagle in the front and a lion in the back, he suggests starting with a cave lion. Currently, there aren't lions in Mongolia but there were cave lions that went into extinction 10,000 years ago.
Steve and Francis are looking for the bones of a cave lion found in Zoolithen Cave in Burggaillenreuth, Germany. They enter a deep cave protected by scientists for the valuable information contained within it. Dr. Cajus G. Diedrich takes them into the dark and dangerous cave. They want to see the bones to help determine the size of their griffin. Only 1% of the bones found in the cave were lion bones. They find cave bear bones but must continue down through dark and tight crevices to reach the few precious lion bones the cave contains. They turn off their torches and the cave is literally pitch black. Steve describes a scenario of how it might have been for the sleeping bears when the lions came to prey upon them. Francis takes some time to make some amazing drawings of the bears and lions but he still would like to get the scale of lion to human.
Season One, Episode Four, Winged Lion
Original Air Date: Thursday, September 30, 2010
In this weeks episode, the team researches and creates the winged lion, or as it is also known, the griffin.
Steve and Francis begin in Germany where they are searching for the bones while the rest of the team is at home in the lab researching the griffin legends.
The Griffin can be traced back even farther than Greek legends to Mesopotamia onward to the Mongolian area of Central Asia. Scott suggests that they break the project into two parts. Since there is an eagle in the front and a lion in the back, he suggests starting with a cave lion. Currently, there aren't lions in Mongolia but there were cave lions that went into extinction 10,000 years ago.
Steve and Francis are looking for the bones of a cave lion found in Zoolithen Cave in Burggaillenreuth, Germany. They enter a deep cave protected by scientists for the valuable information contained within it. Dr. Cajus G. Diedrich takes them into the dark and dangerous cave. They want to see the bones to help determine the size of their griffin. Only 1% of the bones found in the cave were lion bones. They find cave bear bones but must continue down through dark and tight crevices to reach the few precious lion bones the cave contains. They turn off their torches and the cave is literally pitch black. Steve describes a scenario of how it might have been for the sleeping bears when the lions came to prey upon them. Francis takes some time to make some amazing drawings of the bears and lions but he still would like to get the scale of lion to human.
Saturday, September 11, 2010
US Television, Beast Legends, Episode 1.1 "The Kraken"
Beast Legends
Season One, Episode One, The Kraken
Original Air Date: Thursday, September 9, 2010
I've got to say, I love stuff like this. I've always had a fascination with mythology and legend. When a television show comes along that looks to take myth & legend and build upon it with biological facts I've got to check it out.
Beast Legends is a new six-part documentary series currently being aired on the SyFy Channel. The goal of the show is to take legendary creatures and bring them to life using state-of-the-art computer graphics. Behind those computer graphics is old fashioned research, planning, animation and hard work. The investigative team consists of five individuals who bring a unique eye and imagination to each project. Steve Leonard is an adventurer and veterinary surgeon. Francis Manapul is a very talented comic book artist. Kathryn Denning (anthropologist, archaeologist & associate professor, York University, Canada) is a Legend Specialist. Scott Edwards (Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University) is a biologist. Mike Paixao is an animator skilled at bringing anything to life using a computer.
Season One, Episode One, The Kraken
Original Air Date: Thursday, September 9, 2010
I've got to say, I love stuff like this. I've always had a fascination with mythology and legend. When a television show comes along that looks to take myth & legend and build upon it with biological facts I've got to check it out.
Beast Legends is a new six-part documentary series currently being aired on the SyFy Channel. The goal of the show is to take legendary creatures and bring them to life using state-of-the-art computer graphics. Behind those computer graphics is old fashioned research, planning, animation and hard work. The investigative team consists of five individuals who bring a unique eye and imagination to each project. Steve Leonard is an adventurer and veterinary surgeon. Francis Manapul is a very talented comic book artist. Kathryn Denning (anthropologist, archaeologist & associate professor, York University, Canada) is a Legend Specialist. Scott Edwards (Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University) is a biologist. Mike Paixao is an animator skilled at bringing anything to life using a computer.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
100 Year-Old Scotch Whiskey Found in Frozen Crate
It was trapped in Antarctic ice for a century and finally unveiled on Friday, August 13, 2010. Bad news, whiskey lovers. The Scotch whiskey won't be available to drink. Instead, it is being preserved for historical significance and for possible replication by master blenders.
Eleven bottles of Mackinlay's Scotch whiskey dating to 1896 or 1897 were found in a crate that was discovered in the Antarctic hut of Sir Ernest Shackleton in 2006 and slowly thawed at the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch, New Zealand. The whiskey was found wrapped in paper and straw to protect it during transit for Sir Shackletons 1907 Nimrod expedition. The crate itself was frozen solid but the whiskey still sloshed in its bottles as the -22F (-30C) Antarctic weather wasn't enough to freeze the liquor.
Samples will be taken from the whiskey and sent to Scottish distiller Whyte and Mackay. Once that is done, all eleven bottles will be returned to where they were found: beneath the floorboards of Shackleton's hut at Cape Royds on Ross Island, near Antarctica's McMurdo Sound. The samples have been taken so master blenders can try and replicate the liquor since the recipe for it no longer exists.
For more information and to watch a news video of the Scotch whiskey, you can refer to this article.
Eleven bottles of Mackinlay's Scotch whiskey dating to 1896 or 1897 were found in a crate that was discovered in the Antarctic hut of Sir Ernest Shackleton in 2006 and slowly thawed at the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch, New Zealand. The whiskey was found wrapped in paper and straw to protect it during transit for Sir Shackletons 1907 Nimrod expedition. The crate itself was frozen solid but the whiskey still sloshed in its bottles as the -22F (-30C) Antarctic weather wasn't enough to freeze the liquor.
Samples will be taken from the whiskey and sent to Scottish distiller Whyte and Mackay. Once that is done, all eleven bottles will be returned to where they were found: beneath the floorboards of Shackleton's hut at Cape Royds on Ross Island, near Antarctica's McMurdo Sound. The samples have been taken so master blenders can try and replicate the liquor since the recipe for it no longer exists.
For more information and to watch a news video of the Scotch whiskey, you can refer to this article.
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