- Bergman's Bear
Taxobox
name = Bergman's Bear
status = Hypothetical
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
ordo =Carnivora
familia =Ursidae
genus = "Ursus"
species = "U. arctos"
subspecies = "U. a. piscator"
trinomial = "Ursus arctos piscator"
trinomial_authority = (Bergman, 1920)The Bergman's Bear ("Ursus arctos piscator") is an alleged and probably extinct
subspecies of theBrown Bear that lived in theKamchatka Peninsula . The bear was identified and named by Swedish zoologistSten Bergman in 1920.Bergman determined that the bear was a separate subspecies after examining a hide (which had fur very different from other local bears) and series of footprints, measuring 14.5 x 10 inches, which he judged to be much larger than other bears on Kamchatka.
Some think that the
Cold War may have helped the population to recover because the Soviet Military blocked access to the area in that time.Citation
last = Gable
first = Andrew
author-link =
last2 =
first2 =
author2-link =
title = Bergman's Bear
date =
year = 2008
url = http://www.cryptozoology.com/cryptids/godbear.php
accessdate = 2008-5-28 ]Interest in the bear was revitalized in the 1960s. Hunter Rodion Sivobolov reported claims by Kamchatka natives of an unusually large bear they called either the Irkuiem (roughly meaning "trousers pulled down" due to the appearance of the bear's hind legs), or the "God bear" due to its large size.
Based on Sivobolov's description, biologist N.K. Vereshchagin suggested that the God bear might be a
relict "Arctodus simus ", a massive extinct bear. This idea was coolly received by the scientific community.References
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