Lake Delevan Giant Skeletons: Difference between revisions

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===Physical Description of Skeletons===
===Physical Description of Skeletons===
News of Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons first appeared on May 3rd, 1912 in The La Crosse Tribune, a local newspaper from La Crosse, Wisconsin.<ref name="The La Crosse Tribune">"Find Skeletons at Lake Delavan?" The La Crosse Tribune Limited [La Crosse, Wisconsin], 03 May 1912, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49880207/giant-human-skeletons-found-at-lake/. Accessed 13 Now. 2021.</ref> This article stated that the skeletons provided evidence for Darwin's theory of evolution. They believed that these skeletons could be the species that humans descended from. The article claims that some of the skulls that they found were abnormally large and had abnormal physical characteristics when compared to a modern human skull. They said that the skulls would "slope straight back and the nasal bones protrude far above the cheek bones".<ref name="The La Crosse Tribune">"Find Skeletons at Lake Delavan?" The La Crosse Tribune Limited [La Crosse, Wisconsin], 03 May 1912, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49880207/giant-human-skeletons-found-at-lake/. Accessed 13 Now. 2021.</ref> The article also remarks that the jaw bones of the skulls are long and pointed and that some people who examined them were reminded of the heads of monkeys.<ref name="The La Crosse Tribune">"Find Skeletons at Lake Delavan?" The La Crosse Tribune Limited [La Crosse, Wisconsin], 03 May 1912, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49880207/giant-human-skeletons-found-at-lake/. Accessed 13 Now. 2021.</ref> Further information about these skeletons was published on May 4th, 1912 in the New York Times. The New York Times article is very similar to The La Crosse Tribune article. It differs in that the New York Times does not mention Darwin's theory of evolution but instead chooses to say that the skeletons belong to "an unknown race of men". <ref name="NYT">Strange Skeletons Found. (1912, May 4). New York Tomes, Page 13. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1912/05/04/100532982.html?pageNumber=13.</ref> The New York Times article goes into more detail about the skeletons. It describes them as having rectangular molars in the front of the jaw. The article also described smaller skeletons that were found. The smaller skeletons were assumed to be female skeletons and "were embedded in charcoal clay to shed water from sepulchre".<ref name="NYT">Strange Skeletons Found. (1912, May 4). New York Tomes, Page 13. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1912/05/04/100532982.html?pageNumber=13.</ref> Although this information is all that can be found today describing the physical characteristics of the skeletons, several articles further describe their physical attributes. They say that the skeletons ranged in height from 7.6 feet to 10 feet tall, often had a double row of teeth, 6 fingers, 6 toes and came in different races. It was also believed that the elongated skull was a result of a life span greater than the average human. <ref name="Harris">Harris, Kristan. “A Giant Mystery: General Discussion: Forum: Faygoluvers: Forum: Faygoluvers.” Faygoluvers RSS, 6 Feb. 2013, https://faygoluvers.net/v5/forum/general-discussion/a-giant-mystery/. </ref>
News of Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons first appeared on May 3rd, 1912 in The La Crosse Tribune, a local newspaper from La Crosse, Wisconsin.<ref name="The La Crosse Tribune">"Find Skeletons at Lake Delavan?" The La Crosse Tribune Limited [La Crosse, Wisconsin], 03 May 1912, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49880207/giant-human-skeletons-found-at-lake/. Accessed 13 Now. 2021.</ref> This article stated that the skeletons provided evidence for Darwin's theory of evolution. They believed that these skeletons could be the species that humans descended from. The article claims that some of the skulls that they found were abnormally large and had abnormal physical characteristics when compared to a modern human skull. They said that the skulls would "slope straight back and the nasal bones protrude far above the cheek bones".<ref name="The La Crosse Tribune">"Find Skeletons at Lake Delavan?" The La Crosse Tribune Limited [La Crosse, Wisconsin], 03 May 1912, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49880207/giant-human-skeletons-found-at-lake/. Accessed 13 Now. 2021.</ref> The article also remarks that the jaw bones of the skulls are long and pointed and that some people who examined them were reminded of the heads of monkeys.<ref name="The La Crosse Tribune">"Find Skeletons at Lake Delavan?" The La Crosse Tribune Limited [La Crosse, Wisconsin], 03 May 1912, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49880207/giant-human-skeletons-found-at-lake/. Accessed 13 Now. 2021.</ref> Further information about these skeletons was published on May 4th, 1912 in the New York Times. The New York Times article is very similar to The La Crosse Tribune article. It differs in that the New York Times does not mention Darwin's theory of evolution but instead chooses to say that the skeletons belong to "an unknown race of men". <ref name="NYT">Strange Skeletons Found. (1912, May 4). New York Tomes, Page 13. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1912/05/04/100532982.html?pageNumber=13.</ref> The New York Times article goes into more detail about the skeletons. It describes them as having rectangular molars in the front of the jaw. The article also described smaller skeletons that were found. The smaller skeletons were assumed to be female skeletons and "were embedded in charcoal clay to shed water from sepulchre".<ref name="NYT">Strange Skeletons Found. (1912, May 4). New York Tomes, Page 13. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1912/05/04/100532982.html?pageNumber=13.</ref> Although this information is all that can be found today describing the physical characteristics of the skeletons, several articles further describe their physical attributes. They say that the skeletons ranged in height from 7.6 feet to 10 feet tall, often had a double row of teeth, 6 fingers, 6 toes and came in different races. It was also believed that the elongated skull was a result of a life span greater than the average human. <ref name="Harris">Harris, Kristan. “A Giant Mystery: General Discussion: Forum: Faygoluvers: Forum: Faygoluvers.” Faygoluvers RSS, 6 Feb. 2013, https://faygoluvers.net/v5/forum/general-discussion/a-giant-mystery/. </ref>
===Location of Excavation===
Lake Delavan is located in Walworth County, Wisconsin, United States. The skeletons were not found in the lake. According to the articles written by The New York Times and The La Crosse Tribune, the skeletons were found inside a large mound on Lake Lawn farm by the Phillips brothers.<ref name="The La Crosse Tribune"/> The skeletons are called Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons because Lake Lawn farm was close to Lake Delavan. As of 2021, Lake Lawn farm is Lake Lawn resort and it is 2 miles off the shore of Lake Delavan. Many articles written in the twenty first century about the Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons references Kristan Harris’s blog post that states, “The dig site at Lake Delavan was overseen by BeloitCollege and it included more than 200 effigy mounds that proved to be classic examples of 8th century Woodland Culture.”


==Context==
==Context==

Revision as of 06:23, 27 November 2021

  • This is a news paper from 1912[1].
  • A book that mentions the skelotons on page 33[2].
  • Not much connection to these skelotons. There used as evidence of find of giant remains (page 34)[3]

Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons Excavation

Physical Description of Skeletons

News of Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons first appeared on May 3rd, 1912 in The La Crosse Tribune, a local newspaper from La Crosse, Wisconsin.[1] This article stated that the skeletons provided evidence for Darwin's theory of evolution. They believed that these skeletons could be the species that humans descended from. The article claims that some of the skulls that they found were abnormally large and had abnormal physical characteristics when compared to a modern human skull. They said that the skulls would "slope straight back and the nasal bones protrude far above the cheek bones".[1] The article also remarks that the jaw bones of the skulls are long and pointed and that some people who examined them were reminded of the heads of monkeys.[1] Further information about these skeletons was published on May 4th, 1912 in the New York Times. The New York Times article is very similar to The La Crosse Tribune article. It differs in that the New York Times does not mention Darwin's theory of evolution but instead chooses to say that the skeletons belong to "an unknown race of men". [4] The New York Times article goes into more detail about the skeletons. It describes them as having rectangular molars in the front of the jaw. The article also described smaller skeletons that were found. The smaller skeletons were assumed to be female skeletons and "were embedded in charcoal clay to shed water from sepulchre".[4] Although this information is all that can be found today describing the physical characteristics of the skeletons, several articles further describe their physical attributes. They say that the skeletons ranged in height from 7.6 feet to 10 feet tall, often had a double row of teeth, 6 fingers, 6 toes and came in different races. It was also believed that the elongated skull was a result of a life span greater than the average human. [5]

Location of Excavation

Lake Delavan is located in Walworth County, Wisconsin, United States. The skeletons were not found in the lake. According to the articles written by The New York Times and The La Crosse Tribune, the skeletons were found inside a large mound on Lake Lawn farm by the Phillips brothers.[1] The skeletons are called Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons because Lake Lawn farm was close to Lake Delavan. As of 2021, Lake Lawn farm is Lake Lawn resort and it is 2 miles off the shore of Lake Delavan. Many articles written in the twenty first century about the Lake Delavan Giant Skeletons references Kristan Harris’s blog post that states, “The dig site at Lake Delavan was overseen by BeloitCollege and it included more than 200 effigy mounds that proved to be classic examples of 8th century Woodland Culture.”


Context

The article stated that the Phillips brothers found 18 skeletons in a large mound on Lake Lawn Farm.

Pseudoarchaeological significance

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Find Skeletons at Lake Delavan?" The La Crosse Tribune Limited [La Crosse, Wisconsin], 03 May 1912, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49880207/giant-human-skeletons-found-at-lake/. Accessed 13 Now. 2021.
  2. Godfrey, Linda S., et al. Weird Wisconsin: Your Travel Guide to Wisconsin's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc., 2005 https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=mnsGPoAglWgC&oi=fnd&pg=PR2&dq=%22Lake+Delavan%22+skeleton&ots=1Wd06irFqO&sig=SK9pTB2ajwje4oUhx6rgoX8K3mU#v=onepage&q=dela&f=false.
  3. Gray, Jonathan. "GIANTS." (2003) http://www.unariunwisdom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Lost-World-of-Giants.pdf.,
  4. 4.0 4.1 Strange Skeletons Found. (1912, May 4). New York Tomes, Page 13. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1912/05/04/100532982.html?pageNumber=13.
  5. Harris, Kristan. “A Giant Mystery: General Discussion: Forum: Faygoluvers: Forum: Faygoluvers.” Faygoluvers RSS, 6 Feb. 2013, https://faygoluvers.net/v5/forum/general-discussion/a-giant-mystery/.