Salish Sea human foot discoveries
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Southern Gulf Islands (British Columbia) in the Strait of
Georgia
Since August 2007, eleven detached human feet have been discovered
on the coasts of the Salish Sea in British Columbia (Canada) and
Washington (United States). The feet belong to five men, one woman,
and two other persons of unknown gender, the two left feet having
been matched with two of the right feet. As of July 2011, only four
feet of three persons have been identified; it is not known to whom
the rest of the feet belong. In addition, a hoax "foot" was planted
on Vancouver Island
Discoveries
As of August 30, 2011, eight feet have been found in Canada, and
three in the US State of Washington.[1]
[edit] Canada
The first foot was discovered on August 20, 2007, on Jedediah
Island, by a girl visiting from Washington.[2] The girl found the
foot when she picked up a shoe and opened the sock.[3] The foot was
that of a man, and was found wearing a size 12 Adidas shoe and a
sock. It is thought to have become disarticulated due to submerged
decay.[2] This kind of shoe was produced in 2003 and distributed
mainly in India.[4]
The second foot was discovered by a couple on August 26 on Gabriola
Island. It was also that of a man, and also became disarticulated
due to decay.[2] It was waterlogged and appeared to have been taken
ashore by an animal. It probably floated ashore from the south.[3]
This shoe was produced in 2004 and sold worldwide, and the type has
since been discontinued.[4]
The third foot was discovered on February 8, 2008, on Valdes
Island.[5] It was also a man's right foot and was wearing a sneaker
and a sock.[6] This shoe was sold in Canada or the United States
between February 1, 2003, and June 30, 2003.[4]
The fourth foot was discovered on May 22 on Kirkland Island, an
island in the Fraser Delta between Richmond and Delta, British
Columbia. It was also wearing a sock and sneaker.[7] It is thought
to have washed down the Fraser River, having nothing to do with the
ones found in the Gulf Islands.
This right foot was of a woman.[9] The
shoe was a New Balance sneaker[10] manufactured in 1999.[4]
The fifth foot was found on June 16, floating in water near Westham
Island, part of Delta.[9] It was found floating in the water by two
hikers.[11] It has been confirmed that the left foot found on June
16 on Westham Island and the right foot found February 8 on Valdes
Island belonged to the same man.[4][12]
A seventh foot was discovered on November 11, 2008, in
Richmond.[13] The foot was in a shoe that was found floating in the
Fraser River. The shoe was described as a small New Balance running
shoe, possibly a woman's shoe.[10] A forensic DNA profiling
analysis indicated that it was a genetic match to the foot
discovered on May 22 on Kirkland Island.[14]
In July 2008 it was announced that one foot had been identified by
Vancouver police, using DNA, as belonging to a man who was
depressed and probably committed suicide.[15][13] His identity was
withheld on request of his family.
On October 28, 2009 an eighth foot was found inside a running shoe
on a beach in Richmond.[16]
The most recent foot was discovered in False Creek, Vancouver, on
August 30, 2011. The foot was found in a shoe floating next to the
Plaza of Nations marina, attached to the lower leg bones.[17] It
had dis-articulated naturally at the knee due to the
water.[18]
[edit] United States
The sixth foot was discovered on August 1, 2008, by a camper on a
beach near Pysht, Washington. It was covered in seaweed. The site
of the discovery was less than 16 kilometers from the international
border in the Strait of Juan de Fuca. Testing confirmed that the
right foot was human. Police say the large black-top, size 11
athletic shoe for a right foot contains bones and flesh. This was
the first foot of the series to be found outside of British
Columbia. The RCMP and Clallam County Sheriff's Department agreed
on August 5 that the foot could have been carried south from
Canadian waters.[19][20]
A ninth foot was discovered on August 27, 2010, on Whidbey Island
in the American state of Washington. This foot was determined to be
in the water for two months and belonged to either a juvenile or a
female, based on the size.[21] This foot was found without a shoe
or sock. Detective Ed Wallace of the Island County Sheriff's Office
released a statement saying the foot would be tested for
DNA.[22]
A tenth foot was found on December 5, 2010, on the tidal flats of
Tacoma, Washington. "The right foot was still inside a boy's size 6
'Ozark Trail' hiking boot, and likely belonged to a juvenile or
small adult, police spokesman Mark Fulghum said Tuesday in Tacoma,
about 40 kilometres south of Seattle and 225 kilometres south of
Vancouver." [23][24]
[edit] Summary
August 20, 2007
Jedediah Island, British Columbia
A man's right foot; size 12 white-and-blue-mesh running shoe. The
remains were identified as those of a missing and possibly
depressed man from British Columbia.
49°29'55?N 124°12'15?W
August 26, 2007
Gabriola Island, British Columbia
A man's right foot; size 12 white Reebok.
49.15°N 123.733°W
February 8, 2008
Valdes Island, British Columbia
A right foot in a size 11 Nike (same person as June 16 finding).
The remains were identified as a 21-year-old Surrey man who died of
natural causes.
49°05'N 123°40'W
May 22, 2008
Kirkland Island, British Columbia
A known woman's right foot; blue-and-white New Balance sneaker
(same person as November 11 finding).
49.110905°N 123.095627°W
June 16, 2008
Westham Island, British Columbia
A man's left foot (same person as February 8 finding).
49°05'N 123°09'W
August 1, 2008
Near Pysht, Washington
A right foot inside a man's black size 11 shoe.
November 11, 2008
Richmond, British Columbia
A known woman's left foot (same person as May 22
finding).
October 27, 2009
Richmond, British Columbia
A right foot in a size 8 1/2 Nike shoe. The remains were identified
as a Vancounver-area man who was reported missing in January 2008
and died of natural causes.
August 27, 2010
Whidbey Island, Washington
A juvenile or female's right foot.
December 5, 2010
Tacoma, Washington
A juvenile or a small adult's right foot inside a boy's size 6
Ozark Trail hiking boot.
August 30, 2011
False Creek, British Columbia
Gender unknown. The foot was found in a man's white and blue size 9
runner.
[edit] Hoaxes
Another "foot", which was discovered on June 18, 2008, on Tyee Spit
near Campbell River on Vancouver Island,[25] was a hoax.[26] The
hoax was a "skeletonized animal paw" which was put in a sock and
shoe and then stuffed with dried seaweed. The Royal Canadian
Mounted Police have begun an investigation into the hoax, and an
arrest could result in charges of public mischief.[25]
After the eleventh foot was found on August 30, 2011, several
running shoes containing what police suspected was raw meat were
found washed up on Oak Beach, British Columbia.[27]
[edit] Theories
The series of discoveries has been called "astounding" and "almost
beyond explanation", as no other body parts have turned up.[28] The
discoveries have caused speculation that the feet may be those of
people who died in a boating accident or a plane crash in the
ocean.[2] One explanation is that some of the feet are those of
four men who died in a plane crash near Quadra Island in 2005 and
whose bodies have not been recovered, though one of the feet has
been determined to be from a female.[7] Foul play has also been
suggested,[29] although none of the first four feet showed tool
marks.[26] This does not rule out foul play, however; it is
possible that the bodies could have been weighted down and disposed
of, and the feet are separating due to natural decay.
Determining the origin of the feet is complicated because ocean
currents may carry floating items long distances,[30] and because
currents in the Strait of Georgia may be unpredictable.[29] A foot
may float as far as 1,000 miles (1,600 km).[26] Also, human feet
have a tendency to become adipocere (a soap-like substance formed
from body fat), which makes it hard for forensic scientists to find
clues.[5] Under optimal conditions, a human body may survive in
water for as long as three decades, meaning that the feet may have
been floating around for years.[31]
Another theory is that the feet belonged to people who died in the
Asian Tsunami on December 26th of 2004. Richmond, British Columbia
based writer Shane Lambert has advocated this position pointing to
the fact that many of the shoes found were manufactured/sold in
2004 or earlier. Lambert acknowledges that there could be other
sources for the shoes or multiple sources. However, besides the
dates of when the shoes were manufactured, Lambert cites ocean
currents and their ultimate northward tendencies up the Pacific
Ocean from part of the region that was hit by the 2004 Tsunami.
[32]
[edit] Level of rarity
Finding human remains on a beach is not uncommon. Storms may erode
old burial sites and wash the debris out to sea where it is
subsequently found, although this in particular would mainly reveal
bones. In addition, missing people are common, and people fall off
vessels at sea on occasion. Decomposition may separate the foot
from the body because the ankle is relatively weak, and the
buoyancy caused by air either inside or trapped within a shoe would
allow it to float away.[3] According to SFU entomologist Gail
Anderson, extremities such as the hands, feet, and head often
detach as a body decomposes in the water, although they rarely
float.[5]
However, finding feet and not the rest of the bodies has been
deemed unusual. Finding two feet has been given a "million to one
odds" and has thus been described as "an anomaly".[3] The finding
of the third foot made it the first time three such discoveries had
been made so close to each other.[5] The fourth discovery caused
speculation about human interference and, statistically, was called
"curious".[