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Of all the countless legendary beasts that have been conjured forth
from the seemingly limitless capacity of the human imagination,
none can remotely compare with the dragon for its sheer diversity
of form, its symbolic significance, and its cross-cultural
presence. Dragons are everywhere-still glimpsed in the living,
breathing beasts around us that inspired and engendered their birth
in our far-distant ancestors' dreams, and nightmares; perennially
encountered in the myriad of traditional myths and folklore woven
into the fabric of every creed and culture around the world; and
ever-visible within the innumerable outpourings of artistic
creation that have graced and enhanced our species' existence
across all temporal, political, social, and geographical
boundaries. So from where, and from what, has such
widespread-indeed, worldwide-belief in these creatures stemmed?
There can be no doubt that a major factor influencing the origin of
the dragon is early humanity's observations and interactions with
various distinctive and potentially inimical creatures of reality
sharing our world. Equally thought-provoking is how and why the
dragon has become so intimately associated with our own species.
This multi-faceted monster of mythology is more than amply
represented visually, for example, by artwork of every conceivable
style, age, and category. And the dragon's status in religion,
dreams, alchemy, psychology, astrology, literature, movies, and
music is as compelling as it is complex. These many diverse but
equally captivating themes are all fully explored in this
spellbinding book's uniquely comprehensive coverage, and provide
ample confirmation that there is no sign whatsoever of waning
interest for what must surely be the most vibrant, tenacious, and
fascinating creature that has never existed-the dragon.
Following the demise of Cryptozoology (published by the now-defunct
International Society of Cryptozoology), there has been no
peer-reviewed scientific journal devoted to cryptozoology for quite
some time. Consequently, the Journal of Cryptozoology has been
launched to remedy this situation and fill a notable gap in the
literature of cryptids and their investigation. For although some
mainstream zoological journals are beginning to show slightly less
reluctance than before to publish papers with a cryptozoological
theme, it is still by no means an easy task for such papers to gain
acceptance, and, as a result, potentially significant, serious
contributions to the subject are not receiving the scientific
attention that they deserve. Now, however, they have a journal of
their own once again, and one that adheres to the same high
standards for publication as mainstream zoological periodicals.
There has never been a more popular time for dinosaurs and all
things dinosaurian. From blockbuster films packed with breathtaking
CGI effects, children's television and video cartoons, computer
games, CD-ROMs, animatronic museum exhibitions, and theme parks, to
countless books, magazines, toys large and small, ornaments,
collectabilia, and even fun lines in confectionery and other
edibles, prehistoric paraphernalia continues to scale new heights
of desirability worldwide. But nowhere is this more apparent than
within the philatelic world - where the issuing in recent years by
an ever-increasing number of countries around the globe of
handsome, highly-prized stamp sets depicting a spectacular array of
dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals is matched only by the
corresponding increase of thematic collectors eager to amass an
eyecatching, comprehensive menagerie of palaeontological monsters
that the custodians of Jurassic Park could only dream about Today,
well over 500 sets of stamps portraying all manner of dinosaurs and
also a multifarious assemblage of other prehistoric animals have
been issued, with a substantial proportion of these having appeared
within the last decade alone - confirming the escalating interest
among collectors in this exciting thematic subject. And who can
blame them? After all, where else but in the pages of a stamp album
could stegosaurs and plesiosaurs, tyrannosaurs and sabre-tooth
tigers, brachiosaurs, mammoths, belemnites, ground sloths, giant
birds, and ichthyosaurs jostle for attention with velociraptors and
trilobites, dimetrodonts and diplodocuses, mosasaurs, woolly
rhinoceroses, Archaeopteryx, titanosaurs, iguanodontids, ammonites,
giant sea scorpions, and innumerable other spectacular denizens of
our planet's distant past? Now, for the very first time, here is a
philatelic catalogue devoted exclusively to these incredible
animals. Compiled by zoologist Dr Karl P.N. Shuker, a lifelong,
enthusiastic collector of wildlife stamps and with an especial
interest in those that portray fossil species, it provides an
exhaustive, definitive listing of stamps and miniature sheets
depicting dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals issued by
countries throughout the world. It also includes sections dealing
with cryptozoological stamps, dinosaur stamp superlatives, and
unofficial prehistoric animal stamps. This invaluable book will
undoubtedly encourage everyone with a passion for dinosaurs and
other prehistoric creatures to pursue it not only on screen, in
books, or in museums but also via the ever-fascinating world of
philately.
Although he is best-known for his extensive cryptozoological
researches and publications, Dr Karl Shuker has also investigated a
very diverse range of other anomalies and unexplained phenomena,
both in the literature and in the field. Travelling the world in
search of mysteries and marvels of every kind, Dr Shuker has
climbed the volcanic slopes of Easter Island on the trail of moai
and manbirds, he has traversed the Theban necropolis of Egypt's
West Bank in search of a singing Colossus and the head of
Ozymandias, he has journeyed to Woolpit in the footsteps of its
mystifying Green Children, and to Niagara on the lookout for its
long-lost winged cat. Whether it be flying over the Bermuda
Triangle (four times ), inspecting cropfield circles in
Buckinghamshire, questing for mermaids and unicorns, gazing in awe
at a putative living dinosaur emblazoned upon the magnificent
Ishtar Gate of Babylon's King Nebuchadnezzar, revealing a bizarre
yet hitherto-undocumented bat-winged monster encountered in the
heartland of Kent, uncovering an anachronistic Cambodian stegosaur
at Angkor Wat, peering in hope across the dark waters of Loch Ness
and the monster-haunted lakes of Iceland, seeking resurrected
avifauna in New Zealand, finding solace in the stark majesty of
Stonehenge and the holy grandeur of Lourdes, charting the
preternatural entities of Senegambia's forests or Australia's
Dreamtime, tracking elusive black panthers on Exmoor, or unmasking
serpent-necked panthers on an enigmatic artefact from the ancient
Middle East, if there are mysteries to be investigated, Dr Shuker
is in hot pursuit. Now, compiled here for the very first time, are
some of the extraordinary cases that he has re-examined or
personally explored down through the years - from sky beasts and
reptoids, statues that weep, bleed, and even come to life,
vanishing planets and invisible saints, frog rain and angel hair,
and the world's weirdest ghosts and aliens, to a chiming tower of
porcelain and a talking head of brass, spooklights and foo
fighters, Herne the Hunter and photographed thought-forms, the
chirping pyramid of Quetzalcoatl, magical mirrii dogs Down Under,
and the most comprehensive study ever published of winged cats in
which he successfully unveils their long-debated cryptic identity.
All of that, and much more, await you inside this arcane archive of
inexplicabilia, dubitanda, and mirabilia or, as we prefer to call
it, Dr Shuker's Casebook.
Zooform Phenomena are the most elusive, and least understood,
mystery animals. Indeed, they are not animals at all, and are not
even animate in the accepted terms of the word, but entities or
apparitions which adopt, or seem to have (quasi) animal form. These
arcane and contentious entities have plagued cryptozoology - the
study of unknown animals - since its inception, and tend to be
dismissed by mainstream science as thoroughly unworthy of
consideration. But they continue to be seen, and Jonathan Downes -
the Director of the Centre for Fortean Zoology - who first coined
the term in 1990, maintains that many zooforms result from a
synergy of complex psychosocial and sociological issues, and
suggests that to classify all such phenomena as "paranormal" in
origin is counterproductive, and for researchers to dismiss them
out of hand is thoroughly unscientific. Author and researcher Neil
Arnold is to be commended for a groundbreaking piece of work, and
has provided the world's first alphabetical listing of zooforms
from around the world.
Welcome to a carnival unlike anything that you have ever read
about, visited, or even imagined before. Here, before your very
eyes, you will encounter bizarre, anomalous creatures of every
conceivable (and inconceivable ) kind-a veritable menagerie of
cryptozoological mysteries to dazzle and delight, tantalize and
terrify. For this is Mirabilis-a realm of marvels, wonders,
miracles...and monsters
Peer through the shadows and see what you may. Was that
scuttling horror a spider the size of a puppy? Did that fallen tree
trunk suddenly sprout a pair of alligator jaws? Was that a living
toad that leapt out of that split-asunder block of stone? Did those
flowers abruptly put forth wings and fly away as tiny birds?
Behold Trunko, the hairy marine elephant-bear that supposedly
battled whales off the coast of South Africa almost a century ago.
Look around in every direction and witness the very last giant
lemurs brought to you from the rainforests of Madagascar, the very
same unicorn that was once encountered by Julius Caesar,
dinosaur-sized crocodiles from the swamps of the Congo, the
elephantine harpoon-tusked sukotyro of Sumatra, gargantuan
prehistoric beavers resurrected in modern-day North America,
illusive Germanic horned hares and elusive Liberian
micro-squirrels, a giant sea snail with antlers and paws from the
Sarmatian Sea and a veritable whale-fish from a forgotten Swedish
lake, a vanished striped mystery steed from Iberia, enormous
toothless freshwater sharks from South America, flying turtles from
China and a hippoturtleox from Tibet, sea dragons and
pseudo-pterodactyls, and the world's only known tusked
megalopedus.
Let us not tarry even a moment longer. The miracles and marvels
of Mirabilis await you impatiently inside, to scintillate,
spellbind, and stultify your senses. So I bid you welcome, and pray
that your visit to this carnival of cryptozoology and unnatural
history will be entertaining...and not too perilous
About the Author:
Born and still living in the West Midlands, England, Karl P.N.
Shuker graduated from the University of Leeds with a Bachelor of
Science (Honors) degree in pure zoology, and from the University of
Birmingham with a Doctor of Philosophy degree in zoology and
comparative physiology. He now works full-time as a freelance
zoological consultant to the media, and as a prolific published
writer. Shuker is currently the author of 19 books and hundreds of
articles, principally on animal-related subjects, with an especial
interest in cryptozoology and animal mythology, on which he is an
internationally recognized authority, but also including a poetry
volume. He is also the editor of the Journal of Cryptozoology, the
world's only existing peer-reviewed scientific journal devoted to
mystery animals. He is a Scientific Fellow of the prestigious
Zoological Society of London, and a Fellow of the Royal
Entomological Society. He is Cryptozoology Consultant to the Centre
for Fortean Zoology, and is also a Member of the Society of
Authors
Following the demise of Cryptozoology (published by the now-defunct
International Society of Cryptozoology), there has been no
peer-reviewed scientific journal devoted to cryptozoology for quite
some time. Consequently, the Journal of Cryptozoology has been
launched to remedy this situation and fill a notable gap in the
literature of cryptids and their investigation. For although some
mainstream zoological journals are beginning to show slightly less
reluctance than before to publish papers with a cryptozoological
theme, it is still by no means an easy task for such papers to gain
acceptance, and, as a result, potentially significant, serious
contributions to the subject are not receiving the scientific
attention that they deserve. Now, however, they have a journal of
their own once again, and one that adheres to the same high
standards for publication as mainstream zoological periodicals.
Ever since 1997, 'Alien Zoo', Dr Karl Shuker's cryptozoology news
column has been a regular feature in Fortean Times - the world's
premier magazine devoted to unexplained phenomena of every kind,
and inspired by the writings and researches of scientific
iconoclast Charles Fort. Dr Shuker has also penned many longer,
more detailed 'Lost Ark' articles for Fortean Times, surveying an
immense diversity of controversial and newly-revealed creatures
worldwide. Today, not only are both of these long-running FT series
hailed as cryptozoological classics but now, for the very first
time, an extensive compilation of each of them has been
meticulously prepared by Dr Shuker, incorporating numerous
remarkable illustrations (including many rare or
previously-unpublished examples), and presented here in book form.
The Centre for Fortean Zoology CFZ] is the only professional,
scientific and full-time organisation in the world dedicated to
cryptozoology - the study of unknown animals. Since 1992, the CFZ
has carried out an unparalleled programme of research and
investigation all over the world. In November 2007, a five-person
team - Richard Freeman, Chris Clarke, Paul Rose, Lisa Dowley and
Jon Hare went to Guyana, South America. They went in search of
giant anacondas, the bigfoot-like didi, and the terrifying water
tiger. Here, for the first time, is their story...With an
introduction by Jonathan Downes and forward by Dr. Karl Shuker.
This delightful book is the long-awaited, greatly-expanded new
edition of one of Dr Karl Shuker's much-loved early volumes,
Extraordinary Animals Worldwide. It is a fascinating celebration of
what used to be called romantic natural history, examining a
dazzling diversity of animal anomalies, creatures of cryptozoology,
and all manner of other thought-provoking zoological revelations
and continuing controversies down through the ages of wildlife
discovery. Handsomely supplemented by a vista of enchanting
Victorian engravings to evoke the spirit of the period from which
the inspiration for this book is drawn, Extraordinary Animals
Revisited offers an enthralling introduction to a veritable
menagerie of truly astonishing beasts: From singing dogs to serpent
kings, pseudo-plesiosaurs to quasi-octopuses, hounds with two noses
and birds with four wings, the Sandwell Valleygator and New
Mexico's medicine wolf, cobras that crow and snake gods that dance,
giant solifugids and rodent colossi, devil-birds and devil-pigs,
furry woodpeckers and marsupial hummingbirds, archangel feathers
and the scales of the Eden serpent, scorpion-stones and
elephant-pearls, tales of the peacock's tail, parachuting palm
civets, missing megapodes, blue rhinoceroses, glutinous globsters,
anomalous aardvarks, a platypus from Colorado, man-sized spiders
from the Congo, de Loys's lost Venezuelan ape, Margate's marine
elephant, a flying hedgehog called Tizzie-Wizzie, a mellifluous
mollusc called Molly, India's once (and future?) pink-headed duck,
the squeaking deathshead, the vanquished bird-god of New Caledonia,
and much much more - all waiting to amaze and amuse, a pageant of
natural and unnatural history.
Although much has been written in recent years about the mystery
big cats which have been reported stalking Westcountry moorlands,
little has been written on the subject of the smaller British
mystery carnivores. This unique book redresses the balance and
examines the current status in the Westcountry of three species
thought to be extinct: the Wildcat, the Pine Marten and the
Polecat, finding that the truth is far more exciting than the
currently held scientific dogma. This book also uncovers evidence
suggesting that even more exotic species of small mammal may lurk
hitherto unsuspected in the countryside of Devon, Cornwall,
Somerset and Dorset.
Cryptozoology -- the study of hidden animals -- is gaining
attention thanks to a startling number of zoological discoveries.
Karl P.N. Shuker has collected evidence of these mysterious,
somewhat mythical creatures in THE BEASTS THAT HIDE FROM MAN.
Shuker provides entertaining, solidly researched tales about
extraordinary animals. Shuker also provides a supplement to Bernard
Heuvelmans's checklist of cryptozoological animals, which contains
updated information on unknown creatures.
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