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DALE DRINNON - Crypto Iggies

A copy of Dale Drinnon's old blog showing his findings on the Chupacabra myth. In particular those sightings of small bipedal lizards.

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LauraHenson
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views5 pages

DALE DRINNON - Crypto Iggies

A copy of Dale Drinnon's old blog showing his findings on the Chupacabra myth. In particular those sightings of small bipedal lizards.

Uploaded by

LauraHenson
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DALE DRINNON: Crypto Iggies https://forteanzoology.blogspot.com/2009/12/dale-drinnon-crypto-iggie...

DALE DRINNON: Crypto Iggies

I had mentioned some of these in an earlier posting


about Chupacabras. In this case I am not going to continue on about Chupas per se but instead I am going to
focus on the more definite cryptid iguanid lizards. These ones are regularly reported but get little press
coverage.

When I was going through Ivan Sanderson's files shortly after his death I saw a letter from a woman that
claimed to have seen a small dinosaur at the edge of the road while she was driving. She said it came up as
high as the hood of her car and had a grinning mouth full of pointed teeth and distinctly red eyes. She
attached a tracing of the Charles R. Knight reconstruction for Ornitholestes.

This was in Arkansas. The woman wished to remain anonymous but a later message from the same area
described the same sort of creatures as being the size of a turkey but without feathers, with a long tail and
running around on the hind legs. I did see subsequent references Sanderson had made to these letters in his l

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DALE DRINNON: Crypto Iggies https://forteanzoology.blogspot.com/2009/12/dale-drinnon-crypto-iggie...

ater correspondance but he never published an


opinion.

I had independantly heard of the creatures being called 'Mountain Boomers' again in Arkansas but also in
Texas, and blamed for mutilations of livestock in the Arizona-New Mexico area in the early 1970s. This last I
did not put much stock in and Sabina Sanderson pretty much flipped out when I sent the information to her in
a letter: I later saw that she had filed my letter in 'Animal Chaos and Confusion' together with a note about
me that was pretty libellous. When I saw that she had done that, I had the note removed. I don't know why
she was so bothered, because just about all the 'Dinosaur' reports in the Western United States are probably
references to this creature.

Some of them are reported at exaggerated sizes, but most are small, about six feet long and

three feet tall when standing up.

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They are also called by the name 'Mini-Rex', which is a name I do not reccomend using, any more than
'Mountain Boomer' (which is ordinarily used for the common collared lizard. The collared lizard also runs on
its hind legs).

Chad Arment has advanced the opinion that these are escaped basilisk lizards imported from South America,
but the descriptions do not match closely.

These are larger.

The basilisk lizards are Iguanid lizards (belonging to the iguana family) and it is very likely that these are
also Iguanid lizards.

Some reports also include such details as a dewlap, a flap at the back of the head, spines running down the
back and sometimes horns on the face.

Standard books such as Jerome Clark's Unexplained! (1993) contain reports of them under the heading
'Dinosaurs, Living'

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At the time I was first learning of these reports


at the SITU I had also heard independantly of some very large iguana lizards reported in Latin America,
about the size of a Komodo dragon or about a dozen feet long; these would not be as heavy as a Komodo
dragon since they would have a proportionately longer tail.

I learned about them mostly through Native artistic depictions of them, but around that time there was a
mention in Pursuit about 'Dinosaurs' in the 'Lost World' area of Venezuela - big lizards the size of a Komodo
dragon. On Heuvelmans's checklist the 'Dinosaurs' are said to be like Iguanodons here and actually they seem
more like iguanas than iguanodons.

Artistic representations show distinctive scaly crests that identify them as members of the genus Iguana
specifically.

And to round this all out, I had recently been

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DALE DRINNON: Crypto Iggies https://forteanzoology.blogspot.com/2009/12/dale-drinnon-crypto-iggie...

posting a series of messages about monsters reported from Patagonia at the South end of South America at
the group Frontiers-of-Zoology... in this case I had drawn attention to the depiction of unusual creatures dated
around 1600 and reproduced here. In the middle of it are what look like a large alligator, a large lizard and a
smaller alligator; probably a caiman. That roused my interest because this area would ordinarily be too cold
for such animals and they are not supposed to be here.

In this case the lizard looks something like a New


Zealand Tuatara and would be living in about the same climate zone. But after considering the possibility it
might be a tuatara, I opted for it being a specialised iguana instead: its head is perhaps more like an iguanid's
head than a tuatara's head. It does have a distinctive creat of spines along its back.

The illustration does not name any of the creatures but the lizard seems to be a creature otherwise called a
'Dragon', and local legends have it also that the dragons start out as small land snakes, develop a crest of
spines down the back and eventually grow into lake and sea monsters (the Patagonian Plesiosaurs, in fact).

And so this form of 'Spiny Snake' or 'Little Dragon' is one of the necessary intermediate steps of that process,

lik e the Scandinavian Lindorms, at least in the Native


mind.

That would probably put its length at three to six feet long, or a metre or two: the Patagonian equivalent of
the Tatzelwurm possibly.

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