Bernard Heuvelmans (1916-2001) was a Belgian-French zoologist, explorer, researcher, and a writer probably best known as "the Father of Cryptozoology." His On the Track of Unknown Animals and In the Wake of Sea Serpents are regarded as two of the most influential works of cryptozoology. In 1975 Heuvelmans established the Center for Cryptozoology in France, and in 1982 he helped to found the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct) and served as its first president. In 1999, he donated his vast holdings and archives in cryptozoology to The Museum of Zoology of Lausanne in Switzerland. Paul H. LeBlond was an ocean scientist with a long interest in cryptozoology. He was one of the founders of the International Society of Cryptozoology, and a co-founder of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club. LeBlond was an emeritus professor at the University of British Columbia, a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and of the Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society. LeBlond is the author of Discovering Cadborosaurus and the translator from the French of The Asian Wild Man by Jean-Paul Debenat. LeBlond was the first President of the newly formed International Cryptozoology Society. Loren Coleman has conducted fieldwork and research in cryptozoology since 1960, and is the author or contributor to over 100 popular books on cryptozoology, natural history mysteries, and the media, including Bigfoot!: The True Story of Apes in America, Cryptozoology A to Z, and Tom Slick and the Search for the Yeti. For 20 years, he was an adjunct associate professor in documentary film and anthropology at six universities. He is the founder in 2003 and director of the nonprofit International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine, and a co-founder of the International Cryptozoology Society in 2016.
"In one way, the Minnesota Iceman episode is the Roswell incident
of cryptozoology: a glimpse of what at first seemed proof of an
extraordinary anomaly before the evidence was snatched away, to
fade into secrecy, confusion, and endless dispute... [But] with the
Minnesota Iceman, the ostensible evidence's existence was known and
studied almost immediately by zoologists. They concluded that the
body encased in ice was of a recently slain hairy man with
pre-modern characteristics." - Jerome Clark, Fortean Times "...this
is an excellent study of one of Cryptozoology's biggest and most
enduring enigmas: that of the Minnesota Iceman...as [Bernard
Heuvelmans and Ivan Sanderson] follow the trail, the pair comes
across not unlike monster-hunting equivalents of Sherlock Holmes
and Dr. Watson...the story is so entertaining that you don't
actually have to be a fan of Cryptozoology, at all, to read it.
Anyone and everyone with an interest in how and why people pursue
enigmas will find Neanderthal to be highly engaging reading...A
tale of a man-beast, models and mystery, Neanderthal is one of the
most entertaining books I have read in a long time - and for many
reasons!" - Nick Redfern, Mysterious Universe"Regardless of whether
there ever was a flesh-and-blood corpse encased in a block of ice,
Heuvelmans' Neanderthal is a lesson that all interested in the case
for relict hominoids should take note of, and reflect upon in the
wake of shifting paradigms in the here and now." - Jeff Meldrum,
Journal of Scientific Exploration
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