Front cover of sheet music for the El Plesiosaurio tango,
featuring an amusing caricature of Dr Clemente Onelli riding a plesiosaur
(public domain)
Several
lake-dwelling cryptids of the long-necked persuasion have been reported from
South America down through the years. However, the most publicised of these freshwater
mystery beasts was unquestionably the so-called Patagonian plesiosaur, which at
the height of its fame even received coverage in the august journal Scientific
American.
In
January 1922, Dr Clemente Onelli, Director of Buenos Aires Zoo in Argentina,
received a letter from a Texan adventurer called Martin Sheffield, who had
spent a number of years as an itinerant prospector living off the land in
Patagonia. In his letter, Sheffield claimed that some nights previously, after
pitching his hunting camp close to a mountain lake near Esquel, he had
encountered a strange animal:
...in the middle of the lake, I saw the head of an
animal. At first sight it was like some unknown species of swan, but swirls in
the water made me think its body must resemble a crocodile's.
Not
surprisingly, Sheffield's description conjured up images of plesiosaurs in
Onelli's mind, and also reminded him of a somewhat earlier report. In 1897, he
had spoken to a farmer living on the shores of Patagonia's White Lake, who
informed him that a strange noise was frequently heard there at night,
resembling the sound that a cart would make if dragged over the lake's pebbly
shore - but that was not all. On moonlight nights, a huge beast could be seen
in the lake, with a long reptilian neck that would rise high above the water,
unless disturbed - whereupon it would instantly dive and disappear into the
depths.
Heartened
by these and other reports, Onelli organised an expedition to follow them up,
which duly set forth on 23 March 1922, led by José Cihagi, superintendent of
Buenos Aires Zoo. It eventually reached the lake where Sheffield had
experienced his sighting (and which is known accordingly today as Laguna del
Plesiosaurio – 'Lagoon of
the Plesiosaur'), but with the approach of winter further explorations were
abandoned and the expedition returned to Buenos Aires.
Interestingly,
Sheffield had also previously contacted former American president Theodore
Roosevelt concerning the swan-necked beast that he had seen in the mountain
lake. As a result of this, Roosevelt, who was famed for his hunting skills, had
apparently pondered over whether to launch a search for it himself, but he
never actually did so, and he died in 1919, three years before Onelli's
expedition set out.
And so
it was that apart from a jaunty tango entitled El Plesiosaurio (composed
in 1922 by Rafael D'Agostino, with lyrics by Amilcar Morbidelli, and sheet
music depicting on its cover a caricature of Onelli riding a plesiosaur) plus a
brand of cigarettes also named after it, nothing else of note emerged regarding
the putative plesiosaur of Patagonia for many years - until the 1980s. Since
then, however, numerous reports have been aired by the media concerning a
similar water beast, nicknamed Nahuelito, which is said to inhabit Nahuel
Huapi, a 204-square-mile Argentinian lake ensconced amid the Andes winter-sport
resort of Bariloche.
Auyan-tepui
is a lofty tepui (table mountain) in Venezuela, one of the inspirations for Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle's classic cryptozoological novel The Lost World – an
exciting work of fiction in which the plateau at the summit of one such tepui
is populated by dinosaurs, pterosaurs, plesiosaurs, and other prehistoric
survivors.
In
1955, however, during an expedition to Auyan-tepui, naturalist Alexander Laime
allegedly sighted some creatures that gave the more optimistic zoologists
reason for believing that the theme of Conan Doyle's novel may not be wholly
fictitious after all.
As
documented in my book Still In Search Of Prehistoric Survivors (2016), Laime had been searching for
diamonds in one of the rivers at the summit of this isolated tepui when he spied
three very strange beasts sunbathing on a rocky ledge above the water.
Superficially seal-like, closer observation revealed that they had reptilian
faces with disproportionately long necks, and two pairs of scaly flippers.
Drawings that he made of them at that time are reminiscent of plesiosaurs.
There is, however, one very unexpected feature - none of them was more than 3
ft long.
Could
they have been young specimens? Laime believed that they were adults, but
belonging to some pygmy species of plesiosaur, whose small size has enabled it
to persist into the present day without disturbing the ecological balance of
this enclosed system. More conservative opinions favour some long-necked type
of otter as a more plausible identity, whereas others have even likened them to
a crocodile.
In
1990, Auyan-tepui played host to an expedition led by biologist Fabian Michelangeli
and including scientific reporter Uwe George, for whom this was his sixth
exploration of a South American tepui. During their visit, Michelangeli and his
brother Armando spied a silhouette of a beast closely resembling those reported
by Laime, but as they drew nearer to investigate, the beast plunged into the river
and disappeared from view. As for various German TV reports claiming that one
had actually been captured, these were inspired by the procurement of nothing
more spectacular than a common species of lizard.
So for
now, at least, we have only the distant refrain of a long-forgotten tango to
remind us of how a US President had almost set forth in South America to seek a
putative prehistoric survivor.
UPDATE: 31 July 2022
Today I discovered in my emails' spam folder a new email from someone with information concerning the Argentinian El Plesiosaurio tango, judging from the email's header. Needless to say, I did not consider this to be spam, so without even opening it to read it first (bad mistake!), I straight away transferred the email in question to my New Emails folder - or so I thought. I then emptied my spam folder and went to my New Emails folder to open the El Plesiosaurio tango email - but it wasn't there! Nor was it in the spam folder, because I'd just emptied that. I also checked my Old Email folder and my Sent Email folder, in case I'd accidentally transferred it to one of those instead of to my New Emails, but no, not there either. Somehow this potentially significant email had completely vanished! I can only assume that its transfer to my New Emails folder hadn't worked, and that it had therefore remained in my Spam folder and had thus been inadvertently deleted when I emptied that folder. As I never opened this email, I have no idea not only of its specific contents but also of its sender, not even their address. So as I am unable to contact them and request them to resend me their email, I am including this message here, in case they see it, because they must have read this present ShukerNature article beforehand in order for them to have elected to email me about it. So, whoever you are, kind correspondent, thank you for your interest in this article of mine, my sincere apologies for accidentally deleting your email, and please do send it to me again. Thanks very much.
Never heard of this story about surviving Plesiosaurs in Argentina before, let alone Teddy Roosevelt's interest in the subject! I did know that he took a certain curiosity in stories about Sasquatches and Yetis, though, so it's not surprising to learn he contemplated an expedition to the area.
ReplyDeleteWhat could have been...
Absolutely!
DeleteHi Karl. I wonder if dinosaurs could survive today in much smaller size? Could it be that some were not recognized as basically the same species as existing lizards because of the size plus other differences that occur due to allometric adjustments that accompany size differences? Ceratopsians certainly closely resemble horned lizards in many ways. Of course, the size difference is so great it seems they couldn't be giant and dwarf versions of each other. But the difference in size between megafaunal beavers and Recent ones and giant sloths and Recent sloths are also very great.
ReplyDeleteHi Karl. What do you think of the work of Philip Senter on criticizing creationist dinosaur ideas?
ReplyDeleteIn fact, I just found that there have been fossil lizards discovered in India (220mya) and Italy (240mya) and South America. So they may have grown larger like the horse evolution.
ReplyDelete