Screen-shot of the elusive and highly
bemusing Australian newspaper cutting containing a Thylacosmilus-like
sketch (source and copyright owner unknown to me)
A great many cryptozoological mysteries have
crossed my path down through the years, and I've managed to provide answers to
quite a number of them, but some still perplex me to this day – and this is one
of them.
In 1980, a very popular television series screened in the UK was Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World, produced
by Yorkshire TV, in which the renowned, eponymous science-fiction writer presented
a wide range of unexplained phenomena. Four episodes in this series were
devoted to cryptozoological subjects. One of these dealt with sea monsters, one
with lake monsters, one with man-beasts, and one (entitled 'Dragons, Dinosaurs
and Giant Snakes' and viewable online here) with a wide assortment of other
mystery creatures – including giant snakes, the king cheetah, the New Guinea dragon, the mokele-mbembe, and the thylacine or Tasmanian
wolf Thylacinus cycnocephalus.
The very short thylacine section included the
briefest of shots (viewable at 6.43 to 6.44 in the online version linked to above) revealing an assortment
of newspaper cuttings, one of which caught my eye due to the extremely intriguing
sketch that it contained – bearing a remarkable resemblance to the long-extinct
South American 'marsupial sabre-tooth' known as Thylacosmilus. Yet because
this cutting was shown immediately before a clip of film depicting the last
living thylacine (with all of the other cuttings in that shot dealing
specifically with the thylacine), the creature that the sketch represented had
evidently been reported from Australia, not South America. Indeed,
during that same brief shot the narrator actually stated: "Who would
believe the current stories of a sabre-toothed killer loose even now in the
Australian bush…?" before moving on to introduce the thylacine clip.
Consequently, I could only assume that the cutting
concerned the Queensland tiger (aka the yarri), because this is the only notable
big-toothed feline cryptid reported Down Under (Australia's so-called mystery
pumas and black panthers appear little if any different from their official
namesakes), and that the sketch was therefore meant to represent (accurately or
otherwise) an eyewitness description of one such animal.
Artistic impression of the very
feline yarri or Queensland tiger, but given enlarged canines,
not enlarged thylacoleonid incisors (© Dami Editore s.r.l.)
I have long been fascinated by this particular
cryptid and have amassed a very sizeable file of sighting reports (many of
which have been documented by me in various of my books, particularly Mystery Cats of the World, In Search of Prehistoric Survivors, and Cats of Magic, Mythology, and Mystery), but I
am only aware of a single yarri eyewitness who has ever compared what they saw
to a sabre-tooth, and even then, as the eyewitness specified, the comparison merely
concerned the shape of its teeth, not their size.
Equally, the most popular identity for the yarri that has been proffered by cryptozoologists is a living thylacoleonid – characterised in its most famous, biggest, and most recently-surviving species, the marsupial or pouched lion Thylacoleo carnifex, by greatly-enlarged, tusk-like incisors (whereas in true, placental sabre-tooths it was the upper canines that were greatly enlarged).
Australian cryptozoologist/author Rebecca Lang's spectacular Thylacoleo carnifex figurine, created by Sean Cooper, and constructed/painted by Jeff Johnson (© Rebecca Lang/Sean Cooper/Jeff Johnson)
Equally, the most popular identity for the yarri that has been proffered by cryptozoologists is a living thylacoleonid – characterised in its most famous, biggest, and most recently-surviving species, the marsupial or pouched lion Thylacoleo carnifex, by greatly-enlarged, tusk-like incisors (whereas in true, placental sabre-tooths it was the upper canines that were greatly enlarged).
Moreover, even true, placental sabre-tooths did not
possess the extremely pronounced, paired, scabbard-like lower-jaw flanges sported
by the creature portrayed in the cutting's sketch. Only South America's marsupial sabre-tooth Thylacosmilus exhibited
these very distinctive attributes, composed of bone, which served to sheath and
protect its huge curved upper canines.
Formally described and named in 1933, known to
exist in Argentina from the early Miocene to the late Pliocene epoch, and
believed to have been as large as a modern-day leopard or jaguar, the single but
highly impressive species Thylacosmilus atrox is popularly referred
to as the marsupial or pouched sabre-tooth (the translation of its generic
name), due to its deceptively similar outward appearance to the true, placental
(eutherian) sabre-tooths or machairodontids but much closer taxonomic affinity to
the marsupials as a fellow metatherian. Indeed, it was long classed, along with
the morphologically more canine South American borhyaenids, within the same
taxonomic order, Marsupialia, as the New World's
opossums and caenolestids (rat opossums) and all of Australia's marsupials too. Nowadays, however, Marsupialia is
split up into several separate orders, and Thylacosmilus plus the
borhyaenids are now housed within the wholly-extinct taxonomic order Sparassodonta.
Restoration of Thylacosmilus atrox
in life (with glyptodont in background) – interestingly, it has been portrayed
here with very thylacine-like stripes (public domain)
Contrary to former belief, Thylacosmilus
became extinct at least one million years before South America was invaded by the eutherian sabre-tooth genus Smilodon
(during the mid-Pleistocene), following the latter continent's connection to North America via the appearance of the interconnecting isthmus
of Panama. Consequently, the two forms never encountered one another, thereby
dismissing prior claims that, as has often happened in instances when metatherian
and eutherian counterparts have been brought together, Thylacosmilus was
out-competed and thus annihilated by Smilodon.
What if…? – Thylacosmilus vs Smilodon,
an imaginary confrontational scenario, as these two mighty feline forms never
met in reality (© Hodari Nundu)
All very interesting, undoubtedly, but unfortunately
it doesn't shed any light upon the mystery of why this highly-specialised and
exclusively South American feline carnivore had inspired a sketch ostensibly
depicting a Queensland tiger in an Australian newspaper cutting.
Shortly after the Arthur C. Clarke-presented TV
series was screened in Britain, I wrote to its producers Simon Welfare and John
Fairley requesting a copy of this particular cutting (it had not been included
in the bestselling book of the series), but I learnt from them that they hadn't
retained any of the cuttings in that shot, and had no idea what had happened to
them. The series' principal researcher, Adam Hart-Davis (now famous as an author,
TV presenter, and producer in his own right), very kindly sent me for my own
personal research use a videocassette containing all four of its cryptozoological
episodes, and by pausing the video at the exact shot showing the cuttings I
could just about read the cutting's heading (though as was often the case when
freeze-framing video tapes, the picture shook quite considerably).
With the advent of the internet, these episodes are
now available to view online on YouTube, so I have been able to obtain a slightly
better screen-shot of the cutting, as included at the beginning of this present
ShukerNature blog article, but it is still not clear enough for much of its its
text to be read, and the cutting was not included in its entirety within the
shot anyway. However, I can pick out the words 'New South Wales' in the second
line of main text beneath the heading, which makes things only more confusing
still, because the yarri is apparently confined to Queensland, whereas NSW's
feline cryptids are supposedly of the more prosaic puma and black panther
varieties – but with one very notable yet little-known exception, documented by
me as follows in my book In Search of Prehistoric Survivors (1995):
"Speaking of out-of-place
felids, one or more African lions on the loose is the conservative explanation
generally offered by naturalists when faced with the enigma of the Blue
Mountains' maned mystery beasts. West of Sydney, New South
Wales, the Blue Mountains have
long been associated with rumours and reports of huge cat-like beasts of
ferocious temperament. Interestingly, they are not confined to modern reports
but were well known to the aboriginals who once inhabited this range. They
called them warrigals ('rock dogs') - a name sometimes applied nowadays to the
dingo, but it is clear from their descriptions that their warrigals were
something very different from a dingo.
"Rex
Gilroy has made a detailed study of the Blue Mountain lions, and according to
his published account (Nexus, June-July 1992) the aboriginals described
these animals as 6-7 ft
long, around 3 ft
high, with a large cat-like head, big shearing teeth that protruded from their
jaws, brown fur (sometimes light, sometimes dark - sexual, or age,
differences?), and a long shaggy mane. Testifying to these animals' continuing
presence here, this is also an accurate portrait of the terrifying leonine
beast that approached three young shooters in the Mulgoa district south of
Penrith, close to the Blue Mountains'
eastern escarpment, one day in 1977 - fleeing into nearby scrub only when the
alarmed trio fired at it. A similar creature had been reported from this same
region in 1972, where it had allegedly been killing sheep.
"Back
in April 1945,
a bushwalking party clambering down Mount Solitary's
Korrowal Buttress made good use of their binoculars to watch four warrigals
moving across Cedar Valley. And
as recently as 1988, some campers near Hampton, west of Katoomba, saw one for
themselves - this area had been experiencing some severe cases of cattle
mutilation, a feature that crops up time and again when charting sightings of
warrigals.
"Based
upon the longstanding history of these animals, I find it difficult to believe
that they could be escapee lions or suchlike. An undiscovered native species is
the only tenable explanation - echoed by Gilroy, who
proposes that the warrigal is a surviving species of pouched lion. As it
differs markedly in appearance from the yarri, however, we can only assume that
if Gilroy's
hypothesis is correct there are two separate species of pouched lion currently
prowling various portions of Australia's
wildernesses - a remarkable concept, but nonetheless the only one that offers a
satisfactory conclusion to this extraordinary saga."
So could the elusive cutting be referring these
very mysterious protruding-toothed warrigals and be suggesting that they may be
marsupial sabre-tooths, or at least comparing them to such creatures? This could
then explain the presence within it of the otherwise-anomalous Thylacosmilus-reminiscent
sketch.
Portrayal of Thylacosmilus revealing its characteristic lower jaw flanges (public domain)
Needless to say, I have spent quite some time seeking this very bemusing, tantalising cutting online, but as I have neither a source nor a publication date for it (other than the knowledge that it must have been published sometime prior to the TV series' original screening in 1980), it is not proving an easy task. Not even lengthy periods browsing through the archives of Trove, the invaluable website granting access to countless newspaper reports from Australian newspapers, has unfurled it so far (although during the process of searching for it on Trove, I did uncover a number of yarri articles previously unknown to me!).
And so, gentle reader, here is where you come in. If by any chance you have a copy of this highly elusive cutting, or any information concerning it, especially its date and/or source of publication, I would very greatly welcome any details that you could post here, and a scan of the cutting itself if you do happen to have the original to hand. Thanks very much!
UPDATE: 6 June 2015
Not long after posting this ShukerNature blog article online, I learnt independently from two of my longstanding Australian crypto-colleagues - Dr David Waldron and Paul Cropper - that the Thylacosmilus-like sketch featured in the mystery newspaper cutting had actually been prepared by none other than Australian cryptozoologist Rex Gilroy, who had brought to popular attention the previously-obscure Blue Mountains lions or warrigals. They also both revealed that this same sketch had featured in an article by Rex Gilroy on Australian cryptids that had originally appeared in the December 1976 issue of Psychic Australian, and which can be read online here. Here is the sketch as featured there, and which, as revealed in the article, is his impression of the possible morphology of the Blue Mountains lion based upon eyewitness accounts from the New England area of northern New South Wales:
Rex Gilroy's sketch of the Blue Mountains lion or warrigal from his Psychic Australian article (© Rex Gilroy/Psychic Australian)
Presumably, therefore, eyewitness claims that this cryptid possesses protruding teeth coupled with the fact that with the lone exception of the dingo, all of Australia's large confirmed mammalian species are marsupials, suggested to Rex that the Blue Mountains lion may resemble a marsupial sabre-tooth (and thence Thylacosmilus?), thereby influencing his resulting sketch of its putative appearance.
Out of the Dreamtime: The Search For Australasia's Unknown Animals (© Rex and Heather Gilroy/Uru Publications)
His very extensive (43-chapter) self-published book Out of the Dreamtime: The Search For Australasia's Unknown Animals (2006?), co-authored with his wife Heather, contains an entire chapter on the Blue Mountain lions, but all attempts by me to locate a copy to purchase have so far failed (his website, click here, from which copies of all of his books could formerly be purchased, hasn't been updated for some years, and there does not seem to be any functioning facility on it now for book purchasing). So if anyone can suggest a source for his book, I'd greatly welcome details.
Reconstruction of the yarri (top), inspired
by the controversial Ozenkadnook tiger photograph (bottom) snapped in 1964 by
Rilla Martin near Goroke in Western Australia (© Markus Bühler/© Rilla Martin)
Very interesting. Great post like always, Karl.
ReplyDeleteHave you tried emailing the Gilroys with the email on that page you linked? Failing that http://www.paraconaustralia.com/ or http://www.cfzaustralia.com/ may be able to contact them.
ReplyDeleteHis site does seem to be active. I see he's published quite a few books now. Overseas buyers are asked to contact him first for postage costs @ randhgilroy1044@gmail.com.
ReplyDeleteI've tried all of your suggestions, Pat and Campbell, and received no response via any of them. It seems a strange way for someone to do business, not replying to customers wanting to buy your books.
ReplyDeleteThe other option is to keep an eye on Australian Ebay. One of his books is currently on offer, the others will appear in time.
ReplyDeleteAny idea what the source of the 1919 illustration above is?
ReplyDeleteThe Gilroys appear to have an currently active Facebook presence "Rex and Heather Gilroy's Blue Mountains UFO Research Club". They posted there Aug.12, 2015. It may be possible to correspond with them there.
ReplyDeleteHi Dr. Shuker this book (apparently) can be purchased here http://www.lulu.com/shop/rex-heather-gilroy/out-of-the-dreamtime/paperback/product-22827749.html
ReplyDeleteHi Dr. Shuker this book (apparently) can be purchased here http://www.lulu.com/shop/rex-heather-gilroy/out-of-the-dreamtime/paperback/product-22827749.html
ReplyDeleteHaving seen the Australian bush "panther" up close on multiple occasions I can say without a doubt that it is a marsupial. I have detailed my experiences and other reports in my book; https://www.amazon.com/dp/1548445177/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1499055994&sr=8-2&keywords=Thylacoleo+lives
ReplyDeleteIs it just me or does the picture of the Ozenkadnook tiger look like an old film photo negative taken of an animal? (Possibly one taken of a thylacine)
ReplyDeleteOn the extinct lions of Europe https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/lions-europe/
ReplyDelete