Introduction:
Snakes are some of the most feared
creatures on earth. Long and legless,
fast and flexible,
they strike fear into the hearts of those unaccustomed to their presence. Like
all reptiles, they are covered with
scales, but unlike most lizards, snakes possess a thin,
forked tongue, and
along with having no true eyelids,
they lack external ears. It doesn't
come as a surprise, then, that most people are afraid of them, yet as a general
rule, there is little to be afraid of. Not all snakes are venomous, and of the
3,000 species around the world that are, only about 15% are considered poisonous
to humans.[1]
There is, however, something else to fear besides venom. The largest
snakes on earth are the reticulated python and the anaconda, both of which can
grow to a length of 33 feet (10m) and weigh up to as much as 550 pounds (250kg).
Case in point: they may not be poisonous to you, but they can easily kill you.[2]
The Anaconda:
The focus of this article is, of course, the anaconda. In the boa family, the
anaconda is a constrictor. That is, it kills its prey by squeezing. What is
known as the common anaconda inhabits the rivers of northern and Amazonian South
America, east of the Andes. There is also the yellow anaconda which lives in
southern South America, but it is much smaller, reaching lengths of about only
10 to 13 feet (3 to 4m). Anacondas don't lay eggs as many others snakes do,
instead giving birth to live young.[3]
While the anaconda is also known as the "water boa," it spends a great
deal of its time basking in the sun. Here, outside of the water, it is
considered less dangerous, with its weight not being as well supported (for
larger specimens). Still, inside or outside of water, they will hunt, though not
necessarily in the sense of pursuing their prey. Anacondas are opportunistic
hunters, like the crocodile, and typically will wait for their prey to come to
them. That's not to say one won't slowly advance towards you if interested, but
they rather prefer the surprise attack, being content to wait patiently close
by. Simply put, anacondas are ambush experts..
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Introduction: Snakes are some of the most feared
creatures on earth. Long and legless,
fast and flexible,
they strike fear into the hearts of those unaccustomed to their presence. Like
all reptiles, they are covered with scales, but unlike most lizards, snakes possess a thin,
forked tongue, and
along with having no true eyelids, they lack external ears. It doesn't
come as a surprise, then, that most people are afraid of them, yet as a general
rule, there is little to be afraid of. Not all snakes are venomous, and of the
3,000 species around the world that are, only about 15% are considered poisonous
to humans.[1]There is, however, something else to fear besides venom. The largest
snakes on earth are the reticulated python and the anaconda, both of which can
grow to a length of 33 feet (10m) and weigh up to as much as 550 pounds (250kg).
Case in point: they may not be poisonous to you, but they can easily kill you.[2]
The Anaconda:
The focus of this article is, of course, the anaconda. In the boa family, the
anaconda is a constrictor. That is, it kills its prey by squeezing. What is
known as the common anaconda inhabits the rivers of northern and Amazonian South
America, east of the Andes. There is also the yellow anaconda which lives in
southern South America, but it is much smaller, reaching lengths of about only
10 to 13 feet (3 to 4m). Anacondas don't lay eggs as many others snakes do,
instead giving birth to live young.[3]While the anaconda is also known as the "water boa," it spends a great
deal of its time basking in the sun. Here, outside of the water, it is
considered less dangerous, with its weight not being as well supported (for
larger specimens). Still, inside or outside of water, they will hunt, though not
necessarily in the sense of pursuing their prey. Anacondas are opportunistic
hunters, like the crocodile, and typically will wait for their prey to come to
them. That's not to say one won't slowly advance towards you if interested, but
they rather prefer the surprise attack, being content to wait patiently close
by. Simply put, anacondas are ambush experts..
Have You Seen This Crocodile?: A cold-blooded serial killer is on the loose. His
name is Gustave. He's 20 feet long (6 meters), weighs 2,000 pounds (907
kilograms), and stands accused of devouring hundreds of people. Writer Michael
McRae and photographer Bobby Model travel to war-torn Burundi to confront the
man-eater.Patrice Faye is
standing on the west bank of Burundi's Rusizi River with binoculars raised to
his eyes.
"Quatre metres," the 52-year-old French expatriate says nonchalantly as
he sizes up a 13-foot-long (4-meter-long) Nile crocodile basking on a sandbar 50
yards (46 meters) away. It's a wiltingly hot day at the end of the dry season in
central Africa, and the muddy Rusizi, though diminished in height and volume, is
still racing toward its rendezvous with Lake Tanganyika, a mile downstream. Faye
has been studying Burundi's crocodiles for two decades and has seen countless
individuals of this size. The bull is about 25 years old and weighs roughly 500
pounds (227 kilograms)—just average for a young adult male of the species, yet
still capable of inflicting tremendous harm on man or beast.
This croc isn't the creature that Faye is looking for, however. Like Captain
Ahab, the self-taught naturalist is preoccupied with one monster in particular:
Gustave, the largest, most fabled crocodile in all of Africa—a demonic Loch Ness
Monster of incredible proportions and, according to legend, appetite. Gustave is
reputed to have devoured hundreds of villagers, snatching them from the banks of
the Rusizi and the northeastern shores of Lake Tanganyika. Faye estimates that
the massive croc measures 20 feet (6 meters) long, weighs one ton (907
kilograms), and is 60 years old (wild crocs, on average, live to age 45).
Trained herpetologists agree that Gustave could be that large and that he is
certainly one of the most infamous man-eaters of all time. But Faye's assertion
that Gustave kills for sport—knocking off villager after villager like some
killing machine—leaves skeptics clearing their throats...
Fear of the Chupacabra has
grown to such proportions, in Mexico, that some of the people have been trying
to burn the creatures out of the caves, in which it is suspected they live.
There is some concern that these fires could cause damage to the Ecco system
around these caves. The Mexican Government has taken the stand that the
Chupacabra is the result of the over active imaginations of a frightened people.
In spite of the numerous reports telling of the carnage wrought by the blood
sucking beast government officials stand firm in their belief that the actual
attackers are dogs. Some of the information provided by the victims of the
blood-loving predator is less believable than others. One such report was that
it had come through an open bedroom window and attacked a stuffed animal. A
more startling account came from a young woman who claimed she had been attacked
by a creature with horns, and wings. She went to the local police station and
showed them teeth marks on her neck she claimed were made by Chupacabra.
However, the police doubt her story.
Due to the outcry from people of her village a 15 person team was set up to try
and capture the vicious blood sucker. They went to a farm where it was thought
that the Goat Sucker had visited. However, the only predators captured that
night and taken in as evidence were a couple of dogs. In spite of the capture of
the two dogs the citizenry of Mexico believes that Chupacabra does exist and is
still roaming the mountains and valleys looking for more blood. In the Hispanic
neighborhood of Clearwater, Florida some 69 animals had been destroyed and
mutilated. Among the carcasses were goats, chickens, ducks and geese. Local
officials blame the massacre on a large sized dog. But the people of the
neighborhood blame Chupacabra. One young man saw Chupacabra from a balcony and
gave authorities the common description of 3 to 4 feet in height, spikes along
the spine, glowing eyes, wings and long fangs. Chupa had stepped in to the
backyard of the young man's home and attacked and killed the family's goat. The
goat had been gutted and drained of blood...
One of the most extraordinary mystery beasts of
the world is the Minhocao. Relatively unknown to the rest of the world, the
Minhocao has been reported from the forests of South America since the 19th
century. The Minhocao is commonly described as a giant worm-like animal up to 75
feet long, with black scaly skin and two tentacle-like structures protruding
from its head. Known best as being a burrowing animal, the Minhocao is commonly
blamed for houses and roads collapsing into the earth. It is also said to
frequently visit the local lakes and rivers of the areas in which it's reported.
The first published reference
to the Minhocao appeared in the American Journal of Science in an article
written by Auguste de Saint-Hilaire. In the article Saint-Hilaire stated several
instances where a Minhocao was seen near fords of rivers. Some of these reports
had a Minhocao snatching livestock and dragging them underwater! All of
instances he reported took place in the Brazilian province of Goyaz. Saint-Hilaire
also stated his belief that the name Minhocao is derived from the Portuguese
word meaning earthworm, minhoca. Publications regarding the Minhocao ceased until
1877, when zoologist Fritz Muller wrote an article on the beast for a German
publication Zoologische Garten. Muller's article included new information on the
Minhocao, including reports of huge mysterious trenches that were so big they'd
divert rivers and destroy orchards. Unlike Saint-Hilaire's article, Muller's
included actual sightings of the Minhocao. The following is of one of these
sightings, which took place in the Parana State in the 1840s:
A black woman going to draw
water from a pool near a house one morning ... saw a short distance off an
animal which she described as being as large as a house moving off along the
ground. ... In the same district a young man saw a huge pine suddenly overturned
... he found the surrounding earth in movement, and an enormous worm-like black
animal in the middle of it, about twenty-five meters long, and with two horns on
its head. Muller also mentioned a story told by Lebino Jose dos Santos who had
heard tales of a dead Minhocao being found near Arapehy, Uruguay. According to
the tale the creature was found lodged between two rocks, the reputed skin was
said to be "as thick as the bark of a pine-tree" and armored with "scales like
those of an armadillo"...
Keel, John A. The
Complete Guide To Mysterious Beings
The
state of West Virginia has played home to one of the most bizarre "pseudo-cryptids"
ever reported, the unusual - but by no means, unique - Mothman. The first
sighting came in the early 1960s. A woman was driving along Route 2, near the
Ohio River, with her father. As she neared the Chief Cornstalk Hunting Grounds,
a large man-shaped figure walked out onto the road. As the woman slowed her car,
the figure spread two large wings and took off. Ironically, the witness did not
report the incident - "Who would believe us, anyway?" The first sighting which
received publicity, though, was one in 1965. A woman living near the Ohio River
related how her son had told her one day of seeing "an angel" outside. She
thought nothing more of it until about a year later. In the summer of 1966, a
doctor's wife in the same general area said that she had seen a six-foot long
thing resembling a "giant butterfly". On November 12, five gravediggers (how
appropriate a profession!) saw something which looked like a "brown human being"
fly out of the trees near Clendenin. One of the witnesses, Kenneth Duncan, said
that they watched the creature for almost a minute.
On the 14th of the month, Salem
resident Newell Partridge saw two red objects hovering above a field. His German
Shepherd, Bandit, took off into the field and was never seen by Partridge again.
The next night, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Scarberry and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Mallette
were driving near the "TNT Area", near the town of Point Pleasant. A tall figure
stood by the side of the road. "It was shaped like a man, but bigger," said Mr.
Scarberry. "Maybe six and a half or seven feet tall. And it had big wings folded
against its back." His wife commented on its huge red eyes, "like automobile
reflectors." Mr. Scarberry, who was driving, took off in his car at "better than
a hundred miles per hour," the figure spread its wings and flew after the car.
It didn't seem to flap its wings at all, and its wingspan was over ten feet.
Mrs. Mallette said that it made a squeaking sound, "like a big mouse." The four
also noted that a dead dog had been lying by the side of the road, but was gone
when they returned. They went to the offices of the Mason County sheriff and
reported their sighting. Deputy Millard Halstead returned to the TNT Area with
the four, and said that as he passed the spot where they had initially seen the
figure, his police radio made a sound similar to a speeded-up record.
Most tellers of the legend of the Jersey Devil
trace the devil back to Deborah Smith who emigrated from England in the 1700s to
marry a Mr. Leeds. The Leeds family lived in the area of the NJ Pine Barrens
(Leeds Point, Galloway Township, Atlantic County). Mrs. Leeds had given birth to
12 children and was about to give birth to her 13th. The story goes that Mrs.
Leeds invoked the devil during a very difficult and painful labor and that when
the baby was born, it either immediately, or very soon afterwards, (depending on
the version of the story), grew into a full-grown devil and escaped from the
house.
Another version of the story says it was when
Mrs. Leeds found out she was pregnant with her 13th, that she said that if she
were to have one more child, "may it be a devil".Another version is that the
child/devil was the result of a family curse. Another version is that Mrs.
Leeds, who was a Quaker, had refused to be converted from the Quaker faith and
that the clergyman who had been trying to convert her was so angry that he told
her that her next child would be an offspring of Satan. Another version is that
the child was born a monster and that Mrs. Leeds cared for the child until her
death. In this version the child/devil "flew off" into the swamps after Mrs.
Leeds' death.
People in the 1700s still believed in
witchcraft and many people of the period felt a deformed child was a child of
the devil or that the deformity was a sign that the child had been cursed by
God. It may be that indeed Mrs. Leeds gave birth to a child with a birth defect
and given the superstitions of the period, the legend of the Jersey Devil was
born. In any event there do not seem to be any subsequent reported encounters
with the Jersey Devil in which he/it actually harmed anyone. In the last 200
years or so, there have been a number of "sightings" and the hearing of eerie
noises/wails in the forests which have been attributed to the Jersey Devil, but
since these accounts are, in the main, generic descriptions, one is somewhat
drawn to the conclusion that any number of "weird" things in southern Jersey are
attributed to the Jersey Devil as a matter of course. Over the years the Jersey
Devil has been called by a number of names, "Hoodle-Doodle Bird", "Wozzle Bug"
and the "Leeds Devil"....
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