From an 1856 “ape-man” found near railroad tracks in Maine to the famous Jacko capture of 1884, Bigfoot sightings have an uncanny habit of occurring along railway lines — and no one knows why.
From an 1856 “ape-man” found near railroad tracks in Maine to the famous Jacko capture of 1884, Bigfoot sightings have an uncanny habit of occurring along railway lines — and no one knows why.
On a quiet Indianapolis night, a seasoned reporter follows a police tip into the dark woods, uncovering footprints, eerie growls, and a mystery that may be bigger than he ever imagined.
A three-year-old disappeared near a swollen river during torrential rains in Honduras. When he came back the next day with a head wound, his family had a disturbing explanation for why his clothes were bone dry.
A visitor to British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley just captured 42 seconds of footage that’s reigniting ancient debates about what lurks beneath the surface of the region’s pristine lakes.
When 23-year-old Filiberto Caponi photographed a mysterious bandaged creature outside his Italian village home, he had no idea his evidence would trigger a government conspiracy that would force him to choose between prison and publicly calling his own encounters a hoax.
Colorado River Expeditions, a rafting company operating on the Upper Colorado River, released video footage on May 26 that they claim shows a genuine Bigfoot encounter from their first river trip of the season on May 24, 2025. The company posted the video with the bold claim: “No CGI. No fakes. Just wilderness and raw footage.”