Bigfoot: Ancient Origins, DNA Studies, and North Carolina Sightings
Posted Wednesday, July 01, 2026
By Squatchable.com staff
There's a fascinating video floating around YouTube right now that ties together some of the most compelling threads in Sasquatch research, and honestly, it's the kind of content that makes you sit back and think about everything we think we know about these beings.
The video starts with something that caught my attention immediately, the Epic of Gilgamesh. If you haven't revisited this ancient text lately, it's worth doing. Written around 2100 BC, it's the oldest story we have, and it features Enkidu, a wild man formed from clay, covered in hair, living among gazelles, and breaking hunter's traps. Sound familiar? The civilized man versus the wild man dynamic is right there in humanity's oldest writings. Enkidu is literally the archetypal wild man, and the parallels to Sasquatch descriptions are impossible to ignore.
Then the video dives into the Ketchum Sasquatch Genome Project, and this is where things get really interesting. Dr. Melba Ketchum spent years analyzing over a hundred DNA samples, hair, blood, tissue, all attributed to Sasquatch. The results were consistent across the board, and they weren't what anyone expected. The mitochondrial DNA came back 100% modern human, traced back about 15,000 years to the Middle East. But the autosomal DNA, the father's side, came back as an unknown primate. Not chimpanzee, not gorilla, not human. Something else entirely.
Dr. Ketchum herself has said she didn't believe they existed when she started the project. The scientific community largely dismissed her work, but the video raises an important question: was the methodology actually flawed, or were the results just too uncomfortable for mainstream science to accept? In any other field, a discovery of a human hybrid species would be front-page news. But because it didn't fit the narrative, it got tossed aside. That's worth thinking about.
The video also takes a deep dive into hominid evolution and why Neanderthals supposedly went extinct 30,000 years ago. Here's the thing that always gets me, Neanderthals had bigger brains than us, 1,500cc compared to our 1,400cc. They were incredibly strong, adapted to the planet for millions of years, and had no natural predators. So what actually made them go extinct? The video poses a compelling alternative: what if we didn't drive them to extinction, but instead drove them into the deep forests and jungles where fossils simply don't form? Think about it, there's not a single fossilized chimpanzee bone known to exist. The deep woods don't preserve remains the way open savannas do. If ancient hominids retreated into those environments, they could still be out there, and they'd explain every single account of upright, hair-covered creatures living in forests on every continent except Antarctica.
And then there's the part that really got me. The video introduces "Nabi," a creature reportedly being seen in Cleveland County, North Carolina, specifically around Carpenters Knob. The witness testimony is chilling, a real dark black creature, about 6 feet tall, weighing around 250 pounds, with a flat face. One witness described being scared half to death and telling her husband she'd seen a monster. The video asks whether Nabi could be the North Carolina Sasquatch, and honestly, the descriptions match what witnesses have reported across the country for decades.
This video is absolutely worth your time. It connects ancient mythology, cutting-edge (and controversial) DNA research, evolutionary biology, and modern witness accounts into one cohesive narrative about what Sasquatch might actually be. The Enkidu connection alone is enough to make you reconsider everything. Check it out and let your mind wander a bit, because the more you think about it, the more it all starts to fit together.