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Listen to the sound clip X Roar vs Gorilla vs Puma #other from Ronnie Milione:

X Roar vs Gorilla vs Puma #other



This sound is from Ronnie Milione

VARIOUS AUDIO CLIPS FROM Sasquatch RESEARCH.

#cover #other

Cornell Lab of Ornithology dismissed the avian hypothesis. Specifically, spectrogram comparisons were made between the unknown Area X whistler(s) and Eastern Screech Owl (Megascops asio). The spectrographic signatures are notably different, with the M. asio whinny invariably appearing at around 1.5 khz on spectrograms; the Area X whistler(s) is aro...

The vocalization captured in this recording remains inexplicable, if for no other reason than its incredible power and duration. With that said, the vocalization is kindred to many other howls attributed to the wood ape from around North America, as well as many others empirically observed and documented—although not necessarily recorded on audio d...

hoots, grunts, and huffs, approached the cabin, and threw a softball-sized rock onto the porch.

The sounds you hear in this audio file are unmistakably from a non-human primate. The sounds alone are incredible enough; however, when one contemplates that this was recorded in the Ouachita Mountain Ecoregion—in southeastern Oklahoma—it is stunning....

One huff is heard in this audio clip, followed by the loud impact of the rock striking the cabin roof and bouncing onto the ground. In all of the “huff-throw-rock” audio clips, it is essential to note that the time between the huffs/grunts and the throwing of the rocks has not been compressed; you hear the incident progress in real-time. Only secon...

With this file, the listener can compare the “X-Roar” vocalizations with the vocalizations of a mountain gorilla and a puma.

This is an unbelievable piece of audio recorded by the NAWAC’s ARU2, a Wildlife Acoustics SM4 audio recorder, located some 250 meters, or approximately 820 feet, from the NAWAC’s base camp. The recording was captured on June 3, 2018, at approximately 8:30 PM. There are multiple individuals vocalizing from different places within the vicinity of ARU...

This recording from 2017 is actually of two individuals and was recorded not long after the team had loudly broadcasted playbacks of great ape vocalizations. The roars may well have been intended to defend territory through intimidation.
The team in the field at the time—Echo team—only heard the first two vocalizations and never heard the third unt...

Time was not compressed on this sound file. These two whoops occurred in real time just as they are heard on the sound file.

This recording is similar to the first one and could stand on its own; however, it seems somehow diminished in stature next to the “Whistle, grunt, huff, rock” recording. Nonetheless, it is another fantastic audio file of an unknown close-up primate approaching the cabin, producing huffs—presumably as a purgative release of excitement or exertion—b...

microphone while the team attempted to sleep in the cabin. The Marantz unit was located about 15 yards west of the cabin. The men heard and documented growls but none of them heard the strange faux speech at the end of the clip. NAWAC teams have documented similar faux speech a number of times but they have been unable to capture it on audio since...

This amazing recording corroborates the June 19, 2018 incident as described by Adam Reid on Seth Breedlove’s On the Trail of Bigfoot. As the team slept in their respective sleeping quarters (the cabin and various tents) at their base camp in Area X, the metal-roofed Hooch (a storage facility) was slammed by a rock. A very loud gibbon-like whoop eru...

This was recorded on a TASCAM DR-40 behind the cabin while the team was assembled in front of the cabin discussing plans for the evening. They never knew the animal was behind the cabin producing the grunt and then the bizarre “yell.” They were only alerted to its presence when they analyzed the hours of audio later. The “yell” could almost be inte...

This recording was made while India team was being confronted by at least two large animals just after midnight in the pouring rain. What you hear is the bluff charge of one of the animals crashing down the mountainside through the dense vegetation toward India team, followed by the exclamations of raw emotion on display in the men’s voices as they...

The “long whoop, scream” is somewhat of a stand-out among the recorded whoop files. It was recorded by ARU2, about 300 meters east of base camp in 2018.

It is difficult to know if this sasquatch hit the cabin with its hand or some tool or if it threw something that struck the cabin wall with force. There are no secondary impact sounds of the projectile bouncing off; therefore, the animal may have hit the cabin with its hand or a tool. If you listen closely as the sound file progresses toward the en...

The “whoop” vocalizations were almost all recorded on the NAWAC ARUs away from camp. Internal NAWAC discussions regarding the whoops almost invariably turn to how the vocalizations are kindred to—yet distinct from—gibbon vocalizations (gibbons are not great apes; they are lesser apes). The Area X “whoop” vocalizations are almost always multi-tonal...

This recording from 2018 is a short but very valuable audio file. In this case, no rock was thrown, and the team onsite at the time had no idea that their site had been visited in the wee hours of the morning by an animal that produced great ape “pant-hoot” sounds. When they checked their sound files, they discovered this “gem.”

The exertion huffs are lower in volume in this recording and occur very near the start of the sound file. They are almost whispered. However, the events of the rest of the file are evident. A rock sails through vegetation before it loudly strikes the cabin and bounces onto the ground.

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