Bigfoot adds to attraction of forest
By John Dodge | The Olympian
• Published September 30, 2007
Sasquatch believers, nonbelievers and the many of us still not persuaded one way or the other should find a yearlong exhibit that opens at the State Capital Museum on Saturday informative and entertaining.
•More information: For the full schedule of Saturday events from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., go to www.wshs.org/wscm or call the State Capital Museum and Outreach Center at 360-753-2580.
•Address: Lord Mansion, 211 21st Ave. S.W., Olympia, seven blocks south of the Capitol Campus.
•Cost: Admission Saturday is free, but normal prices are $5 family, $2 adults, $1.75 seniors, $1 kids 6-18, free kids younger than 6.
•Hours: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday. Closed Sunday through Tuesday.
"Giants in the Mountains: The Search for Sasquatch," is an exhibit that explores what we know and don't know about the hairy, half-human, half-ape creature that has stimulated so much discussion, debate, storytelling and expeditions across cultures and across time.
Come to the exhibit, and you'll see:
• Never-before-seen foot and hand casts collected by anatomy and anthropology professor Jeffery Meldrum of Idaho State University, a Discovery Channel regular and Bigfoot author.
• Artifacts and artwork that clearly show how larger-than-life creatures are embedded in the cultures and forest landscapes of Northwest tribes. Particularly impressive is a prehistoric, ape-like stonehead found in the Columbia Basin and on loan to the museum from the Maryhill Museum of Art.
• Physical evidence gathered in the field by Washington State University anthropologist Grover Krantz, who concluded that Sasquatch was a form of Gigantopithecus, a giant ape believed to have gone extinct more than 200,000 years ago.
• Supposed hoaxes and some examples of how the lure of Sasquatch permeates society, everything from Bigfoot Ale brewed by Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. to photographs of "Squatch" the Seattle SuperSonics team mascot who is in danger of going extinct if something doesn't happen fast to keep the NBA team's new owners from moving the franchise to Oklahoma City.
As I toured the exhibit last week during the last minute hustle and bustle of getting the exhibits in place, museum manager Susan Rohrer talked about the decision to commit so much energy and time to the exhibit.
"It's a classic Northwest story with roots in Northwest culture and history," she said. "It's the type of exhibit that lends itself to anthropological research and environmental science of the Pacific Northwest."