The participants in and the supporters of the Sasquatch Genome Project received an eye opening education about the politics of modern science. We also received a crash course in publishing scientific papers and the bias that exist in the current scientific establishment hierarchy. We all were convinced that the mountain of evidence presented in the DNA study would be more than enough to persuade the stubborn naysayers in the scientific community. We all learned a hard lesson and George Knapp tried to warn us. But now it appears that even though the negative bias still exist toward the study, new evidence is coming forth to support the DNA Study from a extremely unlikely source.
A study published in the Journal Nature appears to support the general findings of the DNA study. One of the main criticism of the Sasquatch DNA Paper published in early 2013 was that hybridization between Sasquatch and modern humans was "ludicrous", "impossible", or "wild speculation". But wait, fast forward to December of 2013 and a group of scientist publish a paper in the Journal Nature that essentially claims that the genome of a Neanderthal skeleton they discovered was actually a hybrid. A mixture of modern humans, denisovans, neanderthals, and (surprise-surpise) a "potential unknown hominin".
"The new analysis finds that the genomes of Han Chinese and other
mainland Asian populations, as well as of Native Americans, contain
about 0.2 percent Denisovan genes.
The genome comparisons also show that Denisovans interbred with a
mysterious, fourth group of early humans also living in Eurasia at the
time."
(Soruce: Sci-News.com)
The results are extremely similar to Dr. Ketchum's results, a genome that shows hybridization with modern humans and a unknown hominin. It is more than worth mentioning that the Journal Nature treated the DNA Study and the DNA Study Team extremely unprofessionally. Journal Nature reviewers violated ethic rules by releasing the peer reviews of the DNA Study paper to third parties. These third parties then used this information along with the confidentiality agreement imposed the the Sasquatch Genome Project members to wage a disinformation/smear campaign. The Journal Nature also employed delaying tactics keeping the paper in the review process for two years. The Journal Nature demanded frivolous documentation and some reviewers refused to read the paper rejecting it without even bothering to read it. The reviewers that read the paper ask for documentation that already existed in the paper, and some of the reviewers just refused to believe the results even though there was detailed documentation to include three complete genomes. (Peer Reviews) Then the Journal Nature finally rejected the paper for publication after years of delaying tactics and two peer review processes.
In comparison the Neanderthal Genome paper referenced above was received by Journal Nature on
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It seems like the folks at Nature should invest in some cookbooks
ReplyDeleteto find a good recipe for cooking crow. Feathers optional.
Agreed
ReplyDeleteNever underestimate the establishment's ability to deflect blame and spin this to their advantage.
ReplyDelete