The
giant penguin is a
cryptid, allegedly seen in Florida during the 1940s.
The legend has no scientific merit and is at least partly
documented to have been a hoax.
History
In 1948,
several people reported finding large, three-toed animal tracks at
Clearwater
Beach
in Florida
.
Later,
more tracks were found along the shore of Suwannee River
, 40 miles (60 kilometers) from the ocean. A
young couple also reported having been harassed by a large creature
that had risen from the ocean.
Later that year a giant penguin was sighted at distance. The huge
bird was described as 15 feet (4.5 meters)
tall, and having
alligator-like feet.
During
this same period, people in a boat off the Florida gulf coast
reported seeing an extremely large penguin-like
bird floating on the water. These incidents were reported in
several newspapers.
Later that year, another huge, penguin-like
bird was allegedly seen from an airplane on the banks of the
Suwannee
River
in northern Florida. The sighter, zoologist
Ivan T. Sanderson, declared that the creature was
a giant penguin that had somehow been driven away out its natural
habitat.
On April 11, 1988,
St.
Petersburg Times reporter Jan Kirby revealed that the
penguin hoax had been perpetrated by Tony Signorini and Al
Williams, a locally known prankster who died in 1969. Signorini
stated they had been inspired by a photograph of
fossilized dinosaur tracks, and showed the reporter
the huge penguin feet made of
iron used in
creating the tracks. The other sightings are either also hoaxes or
based on observer error; some
sharks might
resemble a giant penguin when seen from above under adverse
conditions, for example.
There were numerous
species of gigantic
penguins (such as
Pachydyptes
ponderosus and
Anthropornis
nordenskjoeldi; see also
Palaeeudyptinae). These are known from
considerable amounts of
fossil remains, but
all such lineages certainly became extinct some 25
mya at latest; they were never encountered alive
by humans, and just barely were contemporaries of the earliest
hominids.
Actual
prehistoric megafaunal birds only occurred
in South
Pacific
and Cape
Horn
ocean waters. No
ecological niche is known to have
existed anywhere which could have ensured their post-
Paleogene survival, as their known habitat and the
neighboring regions are known to have been continuously inhabited
by other penguin species and similar competitor
taxa ever since.
Giant penguins based on the fossil finds also appear in
Jules Verne's novel
Journey to the Center of the
Earth, and in
At the Mountains of Madness
by
H. P. Lovecraft.
In the latter case, they are found in a fictitious
Antarctic underground setting and their presence
is given a comparatively plausible evolutionary explanation.
References
Footnotes
- Jan Kirby. "Clearwater can relax; monster is unmasked".
St. Petersburg Times.
1988-06-11.
1D.
See also