Living Dinosaurs
Reports of creatures resembling dinosaurs in remote regions — from the Mokele-mbembe of the Congo to the Ropen of Papua New Guinea — and the persistent belief that some non-avian dinosaurs survived extinction.
INVESTIGATION OVERVIEW
The idea that some dinosaurs survived extinction and persist in remote regions has been a cryptozoological pursuit for over a century. The most famous candidate is Mokele-mbembe, a sauropod-like creature reportedly living in the Likouala swamps of the Republic of Congo. Expeditions by Dr. Roy Mackal (1980s) and others have found footprints, sonar contacts, and witness testimony but no definitive proof. In Papua New Guinea, the Ropen is described as a giant flying creature with a bioluminescent trail, speculated to be a surviving pterosaur. In Lake Tele, Cameroun, and Lake Okanagan (Canada), lake monster traditions persist. Mainstream paleontology explains these as misidentified known animals or hoaxes.
KEY CLAIMS
Mokele-mbembe of the Congo could be a surviving sauropod dinosaur
The Ropen of Papua New Guinea is a surviving pterosaur (Rhamphorhynchus)
Native traditions in the Congo describe Mokele-mbembe consistently for centuries
Footprints and sonar contacts in Congo swamps suggest large unknown animals
Remote areas of the world have not been fully explored and could hide small populations
SUPPORTING EVIDENCE
Expeditions to the Likouala swamps documented witnesses with consistent descriptions
Sonar contacts in Lake Tele (Congo) suggested large animal movement
Footprint casts were made by the Mackal expedition (unclear origin)
The Ropen has been the subject of ongoing investigations by creationist and cryptozoological groups
African Pygmy oral traditions describe a creature similar to a sauropod
COUNTER ARGUMENTS
No expedition has produced a photograph, DNA sample, or body of a living dinosaur
The Congo swamps are not isolated enough to hide a population of large animals
The tracks could be made by known animals (elephant, hippo, monitor lizard)
Sonar contacts could be logs, fish, or geological features
Surviving dinosaur populations would require stable ecosystems with documented evidence
TIMELINE
First written account of a sauropod-like creature in the Congo
Mackal leads first major Mokele-mbembe expedition
Ropen expeditions in Papua New Guinea
Modern expeditions with trail cameras fail to find evidence
KEY FIGURES
Roy Mackal
Biologist who led expeditions to find Mokele-mbembe
Pygmy tribes of the Likouala region
Consistent witness tradition
ORGANIZATIONS
University of Chicago
Academic
Operation Deep Sea (Mackal Expedition)
Research
SOURCES
RELATED ENTITIES
PEOPLE
Roy Mackal
Pygmy tribes of the Likouala region
ORGANIZATIONS
University of Chicago
Operation Deep Sea (Mackal Expedition)
EVENTS
First written account of a sauropod-like creature in the Congo
1776
Mackal leads first major Mokele-mbembe expedition
1981
Ropen expeditions in Papua New Guinea
2000s
Modern expeditions with trail cameras fail to find evidence
2010s
