The dragon falling incident in Yingkou refers to the "dragon falling to the ground" incident in which the "keel" was found and exhibited in Yingkou area in July and August of 1934.
CCTV's "Approaching Science" has shown a documentary about this matter, but many people don't agree with it, because the documentary has not comprehensively analyzed all the evidence and made a hasty conclusion about the bones of baleen whales. Science is about evidence, and we can draw a conclusion through evidence experiment, analysis and inference. So, let's look at the relevant "evidence" first. The most famous is this photo of the keel exhibition. Because the photo is blurred, we can see a big skull and spine. Among them, the two bifurcated angles on the head are more in line with the characteristics of "dragon". So if you just look at the photos, it's really not the bones of any ordinary animal. The second key evidence is the written record of Shengjing Times at that time. I sorted it out through the internet, and the written record probably has the following contents:
(1) During the dragon descending, a dragon descended and rose over Yingkou on July 28th, overturning three ships, damaging the house of a Japanese factory, killing nine people and overturning the train stopped at the station. Then I found a suspected dragon skeleton. Many people have seen and touched a living dragon before. After the dragon died, bones were collected and exhibited. After that, the keel was handed over to Nanjing Normal University by the police station for preservation as a specimen.
② Detailed description of the dragon. "The dragon body is towering, with three tops on the left and right sides, and the ridge is more than three inches wide, with ribs on both sides of the ridge, each about five or six inches long, and the tail is a vertical plate-shaped white bone tail, all of which are * * * 28 segments, each about two feet long and each more than three feet long. In the original dragon, there was a pit dug by claws, and the pit clearly existed along the paw prints. Very detailed and shows that dragons have claws.