Grover Krantz

Grover Krantz (1931 - 2002) was an anthropologist at Washington State University. His specialty as a researcher and teacher was physical anthropology, including all aspects of human evolution, but he was best known outside of academia as the first serious academic to devote his professional energies to the scientific study of bigfoot. His studies of bigfoot (which he called "sasquatch," after the native term) led him to theorize that this was an actual creature; specifically, a surviving population of gigantopithecines. He was a defender of the authenticity of the Patterson-Gimlin film, and investigated the Skookum body cast. Krantz advocated the killing of a bigfoot for scientific study, if one could be located. He was also drawn in to the Kennewick Man controversy, arguing that direct lineage to extant human populations could not be demonstrated. Among his works on sasquatch are: Non-sasquatch works: Krantz, Grover Krantz, Grover

 

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