Native American Petroglyph Engraver’s Morphological Comparison of Bipedal Human with Bipedal Albatwitch with Quadruped Fisher

As described in the embedded post, the founder of Albatwitch Zoological Survey has been studying Pennsylvania petroglyphs for evidence of Native American familiarity with Albatwitch (Pan chlca sp. nov.). The founder is pleased to announce the discovery of a Native American petroglyph that morphologically compares the anatomy and footprint of a bipedal human (left) with bipedal Albatwitch (right) with a quadruped Fisher (right).


The embedded image was cropped from a photo captioned “Little Indian Rock Petroglyph Susquehanna River, Safe Harbor, Pa.” in a brochure published by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission titled “Petroglyphs of Pennsylvania” that bears no notice of copyright; therefore, the photo is assumed to be in the public domain but if not, the founder individually asserts “fair use” under USA copyright law.

A diagram of the same petroglyphs was published in 1934 in “Petroglyphs in the Susquehanna River near Safe Harbor, Pennsylvania” by Donald A. Cadzow, Archaeologist, Pennsylvania Historical Commission.

If you observed female Panins with young clinging anteriorly you will recognize the footprint and bipedal figure on the right as that of a Panin mother, including her silhouette, physique proportionality, and head hair split down-the-middle in comparison to the human figure on the left. The founder is preparing a manuscript for submission to a journal substantiating the assertions in this post based on his analysis supported by the archaeological and zoological literature. Therefore, pending publication of the manuscript, the founder has nothing more to divulge publicly.

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