Famous Paranormal Hoaxes:  Crop Circles,   Loch   Ness, and Bigfoot
      Prof. Matt McCormick,    Philosophy, CSUS
                  Many people believe that we are surrounded by    paranormal, supernatural, mysterious, and unexplained phenomena.  The    majority of people believes in ghosts, psychic powers, clairvoyance, and an    immaterial afterlife.  We often hear in the news, on television, or    elsewhere that a group of church goers have witnessed an apparition of the    blessed virgin Mary, that a local house is haunted, that someone was saved    from a horrible accident by the providence of a guardian angel, or that    someone possesses psychic abilities.  In Elk Grove in 2005, members of a    local church found what appeared to be blood dripping from the eyes of a    stature of the Virgin Mary.  The tears reappeared for several days.     Many enthusiastic and faithful believers flocked to the site, placing flowers    and observing religious rituals in deference to the event.  The    prevalence, popularity, and frequency of these stories about paranormal events    seem to lend some credibility to them; how or why would so many people be    lying about such a thing?  And when so many normal people believe with    such conviction it is difficult to see how they could be mistaken or deceived.    
                  What we often do not hear about    in these paranormal cases is what is revealed in the follow up or additional    investigation of the phenomena.  Finding out that one of these spectacular    stories is in fact a hoax does not capture the hearts or minds of viewers and    readers, and the media have much less interest in reporting that there was    actually nothing exciting, unusual, or inexplicable about a phenomena that was    alleged to be extraordinary.  
                  But    in fact, a number of the most famous cases of alleged paranormal or    supernatural events have been demonstrated to be hoaxes, and we can learn some    valuable lessons from the follow up on those stories.  As appealing as    stories of the paranormal are, there is a natural explanation to be found for    those with clear, careful minds.     
                
           In the 1970 and 1980s, farmers    around Southhampton, England    began to find enormous, complicated patterns stamped down in their wheat     fields.  
   The    patterns were remarkably regular and striking to the eye, particularly from    the air.  The wheat was bent over in neat, even waves to form nearly perfect    circles, lines, and other shapes.  The local news stations, citizens, amateur    paranormal investigators, and many other people became very excited about the    phenomena.  People argued that the patterns had been formed by formerly    unknown weather vortices, landing alien space ships, gravity field    fluctuations, unusual tornadoes, and a host of other extraordinary phenomena.     Over the years, patterns of increasing complexity and beauty continued to    appear in fields in the region.
                In 1991, two men from Southhamption, Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, publicly announced that they were in fact responsible for the crop circles that had been occurring for 15 years.  While drinking glasses of stout in a local pub and discussing UFO reports which they thought were fabrications and mistakes, they dreamed up a method for making the crop circles using ropes and a board with a loop of rope for a handle.  Their goal was to illustrate just how gullible people are and how eager they are to believe in paranormal phenomena.   To stamp out a circle, one of them would hold the rope at a center point while the other one held the other end and rotated in a circle.  By stepping carefully, and working outward from the center, they were able to create swirling patterns that hid their tracks and seemed to be beyond any human abilities.  They attached a small wire sighting gauge like a gun sight to the brim of their baseball hats and by spotting a distant landmark such as a barn or tree, they could stamp out remarkably straight lines to compliment their circles.  As the years progressed, their skills improved, their patterns got more complicated.  Doug and Dave were delighted when numerous paranormal researchers insisted that the patterns were far too regular, large, and elaborate to have been created by any humans.  The craze caught on and people all over the world began imitating Doug and Dave’s nocturnal art projects.  There is now even an annual competition in England to see who can construct the best crop circle pattern.  Despite Doug and Dave’s confession, believers have still insisted that there are too many crop circles, in too many places, and that many of them are beyond human ability.  The enthusiasts are reluctant to admit it, and many people still insist that the phenomena is paranormal, but it would appear that crop circles are a hoax. 
                 The persistence of belief in many people in the paranormal explanation is    significant;  even after Bower and Chorley confessed and publicly    demonstrated how they made crop circles, lots of believers invested a great    deal of time and effort into arguing that the crop circles still must have a    paranormal explanation.  Going to such lengths to salvage the paranormal    explanation over the natural one indicates that the desire to believe in    spooky, supernatural, unusual, or extreme causes is often more powerful than    our ability to reason clearly.
   
         Consider another case.     In 1933, a surgeon and colonel, Robert    Wilson, was visiting a remote loch in the Scottish highlands when he took a    now famous picture of a mysterious shape on the lake.  When enlarged, the    picture seemed    to reveal a creature’s head rearing up from the cold, dark waters of the deep    lake.  In the years that followed, this pictured spurred a flurry of activity    in Loch Ness, stimulating expeditions, sonar surveys, film projects, scuba    investigations, and countless visits to the lake in search of the Loch Ness    Monster, or Nessie as it became known.   Wilson's picture seemed to    spawn a host of other sightings of nessie.  More blurry photos came to    light.  Lots of visitors began testifying that they too had seen the    monster.  In fact, many people went to Loch Ness with the sole purpose in    mind of seeing the monster.  They arrived at the lake excited and primed    with powerful expectations that there was a monster lurking in the waters, and    not surprisingly many of them went away claiming to have experiences that    fulfilled those expectations.
   
                  In 1993, two Loch Ness researchers, David Martin and Alastair Boyd    tracked down a lead on the picture to Christian Spurling, who was now 90 years    old and dying.   Spurling admitted that he had collaborated with Duke    Wetherall 60 years earlier to construct a plastic and wood head over the body    of a toy submarine.  Wetherall was pursuing a vendetta to embarrass the    British newspaper, The Daily Mail.  The neck on the toy monster was a mere 8    inches long, even though other Nessie investigators had insisted that it must    be over three feet long.  They also discovered that Wetherall was  responsible    for stamping fake Nessie foot prints in the mud on the bank of the Loch    with a baby hippo foot that was probably part of an umbrella stand.  One of    the most celebrated and allegedly sound pieces of evidence for the existence    of the Loch Ness Monster was also a hoax.  
             Consider another case:  In 1967, Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin went into the northern California    woods of Bluff Creek, armed with film equipment and planning to gathering    photographic evidence for the existence of Bigfoot, a legendary 7 feet tall    hairy biped that was alleged to live in the woods of the Pacific northwest.     Their expedition appeared to be a success when they returned with film footage    of the creature walking across an open glade.  In the jumpy and brief piece of    film shot from about 100 yards, the creature takes several large strides away    from the camera, pauses to look back, and then disappears into the woods.     Again, paranormal enthusiasts and Bigfoot researchers embraced the film,    proclaiming it to be definitive authentic evidence that Bigfoot exists.      Sightings of Bigfoot soared as did the flagging sales of Patterson’s    previously published book on Bigfoot.  A few doubters suggested that it was a    man in a monkey suit.  Patterson died 5 years later of cancer
      In March of 1992, Bob Gimlin admitted that    he might have been fooled. He said it was possible that Roger concocted the    whole thing and Bob was an unknowing eyewitness to an elaborate hoax.  Another    rumor that has circulated for years, and been corroborated by John Landis, the    famous movie director, was that a special effects man named John Chambers, of    the Planet of the Apes movies fame, designed the suit for the hoax.   
              Another man, Harry Kemball, has    come forward and confessed that he was present in the film editing room when    Patterson and his friends put together the Bigfoot film.  Kemball says, “they    all laughed and joked about the rental of the gorilla costume and the    construction of the bigfeet.  One of his extra tall buddies played the role    of Bigfoot.  They carefully chose muddy ground so that the footprints would    expand.”  Kemball says that they shook the camera, filmed out of focus, and    subjected the film to processing that would add to the mystery and deception    of the hoax.  
         In    1999, the Associated Press reported that a Yakima, Washington man claimed to be the one who    wore the fur suit in Patterson-Gimlin movie of the   sasquatch.   Fearing legal reprisals from the owners of the film or    others because of the hoax, the man remained anonymous and spoke through a    lawyer, Barry M. Woodard, to the Yakima Herald-Republic.  The 58-year-old man    contacted the lawyer and passed a polygraph test to verify his story.  
      While none of these testimonials are    decisive, they are highly suggestive that the famed Patterson Bigfoot film,    which has been the cornerstone of the case for Bigfoot’s existence, is also a   hoax
        A brighter    light has also been directed at another famous part of the evidence    surrounding Bigfoot.  In August, 1958 in Humboldt    County, a bulldozer operator named Jerry Crew found    prints of huge bare feet in the mud surrounding his bulldozer.  Crew    worked for Wallace Construction.  The local newspaper, The Humboldt Times    in Eureka, California ran    a sensational story about the discovery and came up with the name, "Bigfoot."     Contrary to popular mythology, there had been no stories about a giant    ape-like creature lurking in the woods of the    Pacific northwest until this story ran.  After that report, just like the    Loch Ness case, similar stories began to pop up everywhere.  Other people    found prints in the mud, saw Bigfoot, heard Bigfoot,    took pictures (always blurry and indistinct) of Bigfoot, and even filmed the    hairy monster.  In 2002 when Ray Wallace, the owner of Wallace    Construction, died, his family came out with a shocking revelation.     Wallace had faked the original footprints with huge fake feet that strapped    onto his boots.  And after the story took off    and became a popular urban myth, Wallace would go regularly to make more    prints.  Taking great pleasure in the hoax, he even offered huge cash    rewards for a captured Bigfoot.  His family had known about the hoax for    all those years, but had remained silent and enjoyed the flurry of paranormal    "investigations" that surrounded the lie.  And apparently, Wallace's hoax    caught on, just like crop circles.  In 1982,  a retired Washington State    logger, Rant Mullens, claimed he contributed to the legend of the Bigfoot of    Mt. St. Helens by walking in the woods with huge wooden feet strapped to his    shoes to leave large footprints.      After the Wallace family revealed their secret,    enthusiastic believers were quick to argue their case.  Like the crop    circles, they argued that no human could have made the prints, there were    too many footprints, the features of the prints couldn't have been faked by a    person, and so on.  Again, enormous effort was devoted to rejecting the    natural, simple, and un sensational explanation in order to salvage the more    exciting paranormal explanation.  Again, the desire to believe in the    paranormal eclipsed people's capacity to reason clearly and objectively.     The paranormal has a powerful influence on our hearts and minds; we are    reluctant to give one of these beliefs up, even when the truth is obvious.     So when there is a case of something unexplained and we do not yet have a    simple, obvious natural explanation it is not surprising that the urge to    believe that something supernatural has occurred is overwhelming.  If we    are willing to insist on a paranormal explanation even when an obvious natural    explanation is available, imagine how strong our convictions in the exotic    explanation are when we don't yet understand the phenomena.   
      It's not entirely clear why, but humans clearly have a    strong propensity to find meaning, or patterns, or important events where    there are none.  The urge to believe in the supernatural is so strong in    us that we find miracles in a bag of pretzels.  In 2005, a 12 year old    girl, Crysta Naylor found this pretzel in a bag of snacks while watching    television.  A casino paid the family over $10,000 for the pretzel    because of the notoriety, excitement, and interest that it generated.  A    grilled cheese sandwich with burn marks that resemble Jesus caused similar    excitement, as did a Jesus fish stick.  
       
         

       
      In some cases, the phenomena is not a deliberate hoax, but    a simple mistake.  From time to time, reports of statues "drinking"    surface.  Recently, in India, millions of the faithful rushed to Hindu    temples to see statues of the elephant-headed Lord Ganesha drink milk.     Huge crowds formed as people held spoonfuls of milk up to the trunk of the    statue and watched the milk disappear.  The phenomena was widely accepted    as a miracle.  Scientists examined the case and concluded that the milk    was being siphoned down the surface of the statue in a thin film that wasn't    easily visible.  As more people made offerings, pools of milk formed at    the base of the statues.  The Press Trust of India wrote, "the phenomenon    of idols "drinking" milk could be explained scientifically by the theory of    capillary action or the movement of liquids within spaces of porous surfaces    due to surface tension, adhesion and cohesion."  Once again, believers    denied that there could any explanation besides the miraculous one.     Similar stories appear from time to time in the west surrounding statues of    the Virgin Mary.  Different types of porous stones that are used to make    the statues have the capacity to absorb and wick a great deal of fluid.      
                    What lessons can we learn from these famous cases?  First, people have a    powerful desire to believe in the paranormal.  Natural explanations are    boring, they rarely make the front page, they aren't worthy of being repeated    over the water cooler, and they don't excite our interest or our memory.     You won't remember hearing about the Wallace family confessing to Ray    Wallace's career of faking foot prints all over the Pacific northwest because    it's not on the front page, and it's just not as fun or entertaining to    believe as the possibility that there is a giant hairy ape creature that    embodies so much mystery, fear, excitement, and imagination.  Second,    these cases strongly suggest that once an urban myth gets started by a hoax,    it takes on a life of its own.  And the power of suggestion, expectation,    and the desire to believe spawn many more comparable stories from people who    think that they saw it too.  Are these additional stories lies?     Some are, some are not.  Sometimes copycat hoaxers pick up on the gag and    they help the sightings and stories to proliferate.  In other cases,    people may genuinely believe that they experienced something, but in fact they    were primed, influenced, suggested, and otherwise carried away by an exciting    story.  Psychologists have demonstrated that people will readily    confabulate elaborate stories when prompted in the right ways and the will    insist with all sincerity that what they are saying is the truth.  So it    would seem that it takes very little to start the ball rolling, and very soon    we all have what looks like a huge body of evidence--hundreds of Bigfoot    sightings, for instance--supporting a phenomena that is a complete mistake.     Third, these are only a few of the 1,000s of testimonials, pictures, stories,    and other items that have been presented as evidence for paranormal phenomena.     And these three fakes do not show conclusively that all of the other cases are    deceptions, mistakes, or the products of over active imaginations.  But    these fakes strongly suggest that many, many other paranormal phenomena that    are part of our cultural lore are also mistakes.  People are highly    suggestible.  After these famous pieces of “evidence” were produced, the    number of crop circles, and Nessie and Bigfoot sightings soared.  And    people’s urge to believe in paranormal phenomena is so strong that they will    often refuse to abandon their beliefs even in the face of powerful    counter-evidence.   Stories of paranormal phenomena are entertaining    and popular.  The news about the original sightings in the cases were    picked up by major new services and spread rapidly.  But news about their    refutations is much less entertaining and interesting; the hoax confessions    described above were scarcely reported, and when they were, they were    relegated to the back page or to a much more obscure source than the original    news.  It seems likely that many more confessions and hoaxes have been    made public, but we have not been exposed to them.  People have a variety    of motives for perpetrating hoaxes, and when they do, they are remarkably    creative in pulling them off, making them seem that much more believable.     It should also be clear that when we are faced with allegations that something    supernatural, extraordinary, or paranormal has occurred, even if we cannot    immediately find a natural or alternative explanation, we should be very    reluctant to conclude that there is no natural or non-paranormal explanation    for it.  And finally, extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence.     We should approach such claims with a degree of skepticism that is    proportional to how much they defy common sense and what we know about    biology, physics, history, and human nature.   
                 We might ask, "What's the harm in believing in these stories?"  No one is    hurt by them.  We all find them entertaining and exciting.  And    after all, it would be better to be open-minded to the possibilities than to be    skeptical and cynical.   
                 These are good points.  We should be open minded.  Some of the most    important discoveries in history came from people who were willing to consider    absurd or outlandish possibilities that turned out to be true. But the purpose    of being open-minded is not simply to avoid being skeptical, it's to better    facilitate our finding the truth.  We need to know what's true in the    world and what's not.  Our survival, our health, and our futures depend    upon our being able to accurately and reasonably assess the facts in front of    us.  When we tolerate or propagate paranormal stories we foster an    environment of sloppy, supernatural, and spooky thinking.  We implicitly    or explicitly endorse people's forming false beliefs on sketchy evidence.     And that kind of attitude about truth and evidence leads to our being sloppy    about other more important things.  Superstitions proliferate about    spirits, supernatural forces, demons, and a host of other non-natural    phenomena.  Our worldview gets filled with all sorts of mysterious and    medieval entities.  And the inroads that we have made with hundreds of    years of the growth of science get lost in an environment of fear,    superstition, and fuzzy thinking.  The urge to believe in the paranormal    is so powerful that it takes constant vigilance to keep ourselves from    slipping into a backward, dark age.