Not such a big beast!
- £84,000 probe into Cornish 'beast' 19 years ago found it was a 12in cat
- Experts looked at photographs and videos and staged reconstructions
- Beast first 'spotted' in 1983, with at least 60 reported sightings since
Despite no solid proof of its existence ever being found, it is one of Britain’s most feared animals. But
newly-unearthed records have revealed a six-month Government
investigation into the Beast of Bodmin Moor proved it was far from a
monster – and, rather, just a large pussycat. The
probe in 1995 into the Cornish ‘beast’ and other unknown animals
reported to have been roaming Britain found there was no 'verifiable
evidence' of exotic cats loose in the UK.
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Previous 'sighting': In July, there
was an alleged sighting of the Beast of Bodmin Moor when a teenager
taking photographs in fields near his home in Cornwall spotted
'something run across the field'
Feared animal: The Beast of Bodmin
Moor was first ‘spotted’ in 1983, and there have since been at least 60
reported sightings - including this one
A
group of experts found the 'beast' was actually a black cat about 12in
(30cm) tall, after spending £84,000 in today’s money looking at
photographs and videos, as well as staging reconstructions.
Sheffield
Hallam University journalism professor David Clarke - an expert on
contemporary myths - found the findings in a file at the Public Record
Office, reported The Sun journalist Paul Sims.
The
'beast' was first ‘spotted’ in 1983, and there have since been at least
60 reported sightings. But the report in 1995 by the Ministry of
Agriculture, Fisheries and Food declared it a phantom.
Found in 1995: A skull with large
fangs and what was thought to be the remains of a big cat were found in
the River Fowey near the moor by a boy
However the researchers also concluded that they had been unable to prove that big cats were 'not present.'
But
shortly after the report was published, a skull with large fangs and
what was thought to be the remains of a big cat were found in the River
Fowey near the moor by a boy aged 14.
The
skull was sent to the Natural History Museum in South Kensington,
central London, for verification - where it was found it was a genuine
skull from a young male leopard.
They also found that the cat had not died in Britain. In fact, the skull had been imported as part of a leopard-skin rug. Then in 1998 a 20-second video was released and said by some experts as the best evidence yet that big cats had roamed the moor. In July, MailOnline reported a recent alleged sighting of the 'beast' when a teenager taking photographs in fields near his home in Cornwall spotted ‘something run across the field.’
Henry
Warren, 19, said at the time that the animal was ‘absolutely massive
and was hopping up and down like a large cat - there's no way it was a
fox or a dog’.
Mr
Warren managed to take several frames before the animal disappeared
into undergrowth in the field at Gwinear, just a few miles from remote
Bodmin Moor where the 'beast' is said to roam.
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