Men of Cryptozoology: Mark A. Hall

Posted by: Loren Coleman on June 14th, 2007

Mark A. Hall

Happy birthday to Mark A. Hall.

It seems only fitting that Hall entered the world on Flag Day. A Fortean, cryptozoologist, author, and theorist, Hall was born on June 14, 1946, raised in the heartland of America, and served in West Berlin during the midst of the Cold War, as a linguist. Besides being an editor at an archeological society in Minnesota after his military service, Hall has worked in human relations in various branches of the federal government while in his home state. He’s an old-fashioned patriot who allows himself to question the scientific establishment with every breath he takes, and with each stroke of his computer keys.

Mark A. Hall has been intrigued by nature’s anomalies for most of his life. Closing in on nearly fifty years, he has actively pursued historical records and eyewitness testimony concerning cryptozoological phenomena. He has traveled extensively throughout the Americas.

As an author, some of his works, such as an early book on Thunderbirds, Natural Mysteries, The Yeti, Bigfoot & True Giants, and Living Fossils, were self-published. For years, he edited and published the journal Wonders, devoted mostly to cryptozoology and to other Forteana that interested him. In recent years, his books have been more formally published. They cover unique subjects, such as Thunderbirds: America’s Living Legends of Giant Birds and his forthcoming Merbeings.

Hall Thunderbirds

The cover of Mark A. Hall’s 2004 book, Thunderbirds: America’s Living Legends of Giant Birds.

As a bold theorist, Hall has written that North America is home not only to the Bigfoot of the Patterson-Gimlin footage, but also to drastically different primates such as the True Giant (probablyGigantopithecus, he thinks) and the Taller-hominid (which he sees as survivors of the recorded fossil known as Homo gardarensis).

Hall was involved with Ivan T. Sanderson in investigations of the Minnesota Iceman, appeared on “Unsolved Mysteries” detailing that involvement, and was a director of the Sanderson-founded Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained (SITU) in the early 1970s.

I was introduced to Mark Hall in 1969, by Sanderson, and we have been correspondents, research associates, and friends for over 38 years. His theories, challenges even within cryptozoology, memory for details, and intellectual insights have always impressed me.

Hall proposed a new technique and coined the name for a modern form of studying cryptids, which he termed “telebiology,” years ago. He formalized his thoughts about the concept, in print, a decade ago. Speaking of his suggested method, specifically to study unknown primates, Hall wrote:

With temporary captives, we should do the best we can with them and then set them free. The results will be genuine knowledge in the records we will then have, and we will have invested in the future of a new relationship with our primate relatives. This approach is part of what I have called ‘telebiology,’ a means by which we can begin to study the cryptids that have been the object of cryptozoology. If we make the effort to study animals at a distance, using our brains and technology, we can succeed where others have failed in the past. If we can accept that starting to study a species with a dead animal can be difficult, then we can put that goal at the end of the process instead of making it a requirement to do anything at all.by Mark A. Hall, from The Yeti, Bigfoot & True Giants, 1997: 110.

Lizard Man

The essence of Hall’s earlier self-published Lizardmen serves as the foundation for his new, expanded, updated book, Merbeings: The True History of Mermaids and Lizardmen by Mark A. Hall, being professionally published by Anomalist Books, late in 2007.

Spread the Word!

Similar Phenomena:

7 Responses to “Men of Cryptozoology: Mark A. Hall”

  1. DWA responds:

    While not saying I subscribe to every one of Mark Hall’s theories, I can certainly say I don’t know, for sure, about any of them.

    And we won’t until we look.

    Happy Birthday, Mark, and here’s to the ones who search.

  2. Ceroill responds:

    Happy Birthday, Mark!

  3. bill green responds:

    hey mark happy birthday to you :) i still really enjoy reading your newsletters about cryptozoology etc. good afternoon bill green ct sasquatch researcher

  4. Remus responds:

    Here’s to you Mark!
    As you know, my former boss always refered to you as the “Loch Ness Monster Man” :-) even though you have written hardly anything on that subject.
    I’ve read everything I could find about you and your ideas on the ‘Net. I truly believe that the “birds” are out there.
    I only met you a few times about, what? 18 years ago? But my respect for you has only grown in the mean time.

    Happy Birthday.

    Bloomington Insty-Prints Guy

  5. LiberalDem responds:

    Happy Birthday Mark! Hope you have many more. Your writings are a very enjoyable read, and I look forward to more in the future.

  6. DinomanPhil responds:

    I’ve heard alot about the books Mark Hall wrote on North American Thunderbirds. I’ve also visited his website. I really hope that someday we find evidence that the thunderbird exists, be it pterosaur - or giant eagle.

  7. Terry W. Colvin responds:

    Mark, a belated happy birthday. I too am inspired by your writing, especially your encouraging others to do information gleaning.



Leave your comments

You must be logged in to post a comment.

|Top | Content|


Donate Today

Advertisement




|Top | FarBar|



Attention: This is the end of the usable page!
The images below are preloaded standbys only.
This is helpful to those with slower Internet connections.