QUOTE(kaboom13 @ Aug 1 2010, 07:43 PM)
I'm now not following at all. Every single one of your references about dragons are over four hundred years old in age. Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent is the Aztec god of fertility. The Chinese Ocean Branch heads and the rain god are worshipped and taught in mythos. Saint George's dragon is a misconstrued myth from thousands of years ago.
Are you using mythos or ancient sightings where witnesses happened to throw thousands upon thousands of their hours to worshipping these mysterious sightings.
Would UFOs count? They're sighted often.
Wait. What? What are you saying are animals? I mean, wikipedia might be wrong, but it claims explicitly that we very much are. Why can't we discuss werewolf magick and vampires while we're at it? Is it because we don't have vampire sightings anymore, or that they're slowly 'coming out of the coffin' more and more?
Sorry, fatherjhon to continue this here, but it's become the topic at hand.
Humans are not included in zoological study, and are thus in this context not animals.
There are plenty of modern dragon sightings... use the internet.
UFOs are NOT ANIMALS.
Vampire sightings were never the norm. Vampires, as we know them, were invented by Bram Stoker in "Dracula." The term, let alone the creature in question was invented by Bram Stoker. There were similar demons in myths, but vampires are a relatively recent creation in comparison to what we've been discussing. Cryptozoology is not cryptotheology and does not encompass religious and/or magical beings (werewolves, vampires, etc.), merely animals. Just. Animals.