In 1958, a construction worker, Jerry Crew, found a big human-like footprint in the muck of Bluff Creek Valley. This sparked “Bigfoot fever” that is still very real today. Then in 1967, Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin, took video of the creature in Bluff Creek. In his initial description of what he had seen Patterson estimated Bigfoot's height to be six and a half to seven feet tall, and then changed it to seven and a half feet tall, which isn't really that tall. The highest concentration of supposed Bigfoot sightings have taken place in the northern part of the United States and far western Canada. There are thousands of eyewitnesses.
It’s about 6-8 feet tall with brownish …show more content…
It’s brave; it would sacrifice itself in the name of guarding the animals of the north. It’s just like Judy Hopps from Zootopia. Judy would do anything in her power to keep her city safe, even if that meant losing her job.
His secondary archetype would be the caregiver. All it wants to do is protect its fellow animals and is very generous. It’s a lot like Radagast The Brown in the Hobbit movies. He goes out of his way to take care of the animals of the forest.
Bigfoot’s ordinary world was before Columbus came with its other bigfoots in the northern forests living in caves. His allies were the animals, trees, and the Native Americans. Its enemy is the white man and he wants nothing to do with them and doesn’t understand their need of understanding it.
The two roles it would have would have are: god of the forest and the god of the animals inside of the forest. It already takes care of them already, why not be god of them? Three symbols that would represent him are a mountain, a pine tree, and a large foot. The mountainous regions being his main focus, the pine tree represents his forest involvement, and his large foot representing his size and