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What's with the Siberian savage?

In Siberia, there are many rumors about Russian savages. It is said that there are two kinds of Russian savages, one is very human and the other is all kinds of large animals. Folktales and legends were added to all the reports. Once humanoid savages only appeared in Yakutia region in northeast Siberia (just north of the northeast corner of China, 60 degrees north latitude). The latter savage is scattered all over Siberia from west to east, which is a truly vast area, with the longest distance of 8000 kilometers from east to west. We found that people's descriptions of savages all over Siberia were strikingly similar. These furry animals haunt the frozen soil and coniferous forests, causing many incredible stories.

The desolation and vastness of Siberia is unimaginable, with the whole area exceeding 1200 square kilometers. In the past 20 years, although the former Soviet government encouraged immigrants to this Dayuanye, the population density here is still very low. Most of the indigenous people in Siberia are semi-nomadic reindeer families. A large part of the story about savage is told by these herders, and the other part is reported by scientists and scholars. Out of interest, these foreigners have a strong interest in investigating savages. They use the descriptions of local residents to look up information. Many dramatic stories often happen in places where local people work. The following is a story told by an old man.

"300 meters away from the river, I and two adults, six boys, are piling hay. There is a hut nearby, which is a temporary place to live when mowing the grass. We suddenly found that there were two monsters on the other side of the river that we had never seen before-one was short and dark, and the other was more than 2 meters high and gray.

They looked like people, but we immediately realized that they were not people. Everyone stopped mowing the grass and just watched what they were doing. I saw them around a big willow tree. The big white monster runs in front, and the little black monster runs behind, as if playing and running fast. They ran naked for a few minutes, then quickly ran away, and then disappeared.

We hurried back to the hut and stayed for a whole hour, afraid to come out. Then, we grabbed what we had at hand as weapons, took guns, and took a boat to the place where monsters played on the other side. There, we saw many large and small footprints around the willow tree. I can't remember the traces of small footprints, but I observed big footprints at that time. They are really big, like wearing big leather boots in winter, but their toes seem to be obviously separated. There are six clear footprints * * *, all about the same length. Toes are not close together like people's, but slightly apart. "

This report is interesting for two reasons: first, many people saw animals at the same time (and there were other villagers) instead of one person; Second, I saw a big savage and a little savage together at the same time. This inevitably leads to a question: Is that young child of the same race?

It has been half a century, so there is no need to dwell on the details at that time. Judging from the basic situation and footprints described, it is likely to be a snowman.

When many explorers searched for information about Siberian snowmen with great interest, they learned that snowmen often stole the carcasses of animals killed by hunters, thus inferring that snowmen were carnivores. Scholars speculate that the Siberian snowman has undergone a strange degeneration during its evolution, and it is this phenomenon that makes the snowman a great mystery in Siberia.