We realize it's a little strange to discuss things that never occurred - after all, countless things didn't happen in 2012, from an asteroid hitting Earth, to Justin Bieber marrying a supermodel, to Abraham Lincoln climbing out of his grave to praise Steven Spielberg's "Lincoln" as being more historically accurate than "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter."
But there were a handful of stories that made the news, often with a
splash, promising big news, and turned out to be non-stories,
non-events. Here are a few.
Eagle Snatches Baby in Canadian Park
It was a bizarre, terrifying sight seen by millions of people: A large
bird videotaped in the skies above a Canadian park suddenly swooping
down and snatching a baby. The bird drops the child a few seconds later,
flying away and leaving shocked bystanders. A day after the video went viral,
students at an animation school, Centre NAD, admitted that they had
created the hoaxed video. A statement issued by the school credited (or
blamed) three of its students and explained, "both the eagle and the kid
were created in 3D animation and integrated in to the film afterwards."
As interesting — and scary — as the event was, it turned out to be a
non-story.
Mayan Apocalypse
According to many, Dec. 21, 2012, was to be the end of times. Or the
beginning of the best of times, depending on who you talked to.
2012-inspired folks tended to fall into one of two categories: The
gloom-and-doomers expected global cataclysm involving death, fire,
planetary collapse, pole shifting, and other unspecified natural (or
even supernatural) disasters. The second kind were more optimistic,
expecting Dec. 21 to usher in a new age of cosmic peace, harmony, and
global enlightenment. Scholars patiently explained that despite dramatic
claims to the contrary, the Mayans didn't actually hold much
significance for the date, and they certainly didn't think the world
would end on that date. Their calendar did not, as many assumed, "end"
on that day; it was simply the end of one cycle and the beginning of
another.
Much of the hype and concern over the date originated not from ancient
nor modern Mayas, but instead New Agers. Neither doomsday nor world
peace broke out, leaving some people relieved, others confused, and many
amused. [Oops! 11 Failed Doomsday Predictions]
Bigfoot Proven Through DNA
This was also to be the year that genetic testing confirmed the existence of Bigfoot.
According to a press release issued by a company called DNA Diagnostics
detailing research by a Texas veterinarian, "A team of scientists ...
confirms the existence of a novel hominin hybrid species, commonly
called 'Bigfoot' or 'Sasquatch,' living in North America," the release
reads.
Not only that, but Bigfoot is a half-human hybrid
that had sex with human women approximately 15,000 years ago — or so
the theory goes. If it all sounds a little dubious, it should: there was
no evidence offered at all. The evidence, which has allegedly taken
five years to collect and analyze, has yet to be published in any
peer-reviewed scientific journal. Until and unless scientists are
allowed to examine the evidence, Bigfoot DNA will remain a non-story.
UFOs Invade Denver
In November, an unusual video of mysterious dark objects
moving very quickly and erratically over the skies of Denver, Colo.,
caused a national stir. An anonymous UFO buff showed KDVR Fox News
reporter Heidi Hemmat home videos he had taken from an open field during
the past summer of "strange objects ... nobody can explain."
The UFOs,
it was claimed, seemed to be taking off and flying over the Mile High
City at around Noon on many different occasions. The TV report featured
an aviation expert named Steve Cowell who stated categorically that in
his opinion the objects he saw in the video were not airplanes,
helicopters, nor birds. Many people favored the flying saucer theory,
though none were able to explain why no one in Denver had noticed the
extraterrestrial spacecraft that repeatedly flew over their city at
midday. Skeptics noted that the objects caught on film moved a lot like
insects flying in the air, and that the cameraman probably simply
recorded bugs. With no further evidence of aliens, the buzz about the
Denver UFO finally faded away. [UFO Quiz: What's Really Out There]
Denver wasn't the only city to have its skies lit up with alleged UFOs.
A single week in December saw strange illuminated objects hovering in
the sky above San Francisco and Brooklyn, N.Y. The dancing lights, it
seems, were likely the usual UFO
fare: some sort of floating object with a light. "It looks to me like
it could have been balloons, carrying lights," Bing Quock, assistant
director of the Morrison Planetarium at the California Academy of
Sciences, told CBS San Francisco,
of the San Francisco lights. Another idea: Chinese floating lanterns,
which have spurred at least one other, now-debunked, UFO sighting.
A foursome of lights above Lebanon, Mo., in May, shown in a shaky night-vision video,
also sparked a UFO report. While the videographer Jim Barnhill was sure
the sight was of extraterrestrial origin, it seemed to have all the
makings of an Earthly aircraft: blinking strobe lights characteristic of
known aircraft; and a flight altitude, pattern and speed characteristic
of known aircraft.
It would have been nice if Bigfoot had been proven or aliens had made
their presence known (and not nice if an eagle had snatched a baby or
the world ended). But there's always next year...
Benjamin Radford is deputy editor of "Skeptical Inquirer" science magazine and author of six books including Scientific Paranormal Investigation: How to Solve Unexplained Mysteries.
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