In view of the expeditions and interest lately in looking for the Russian bigfoot I thought I would recap some of the history of the sightings.
Almasty or Almas, is apparently Mongolian for 'wild man', and is presumed to be a hominid which lives in the Caucasus and Pamir Mountains of central Asia, and also the Altai Mountains of southern Mongolia
The
Almastys (Almasties?) are like humans in that they they have 2 arms and 2 legs , except that they are covered with hair.
"The hair is like that of
a bear, and dark. I always saw them without clothing . . . they do not
know how to speak; they only mumble or bellow. They are not afraid of
people, only of dogs. They run very fast." That is how 67-year-old
Koumykov Feitsa, from the village of Kurkujm, deep in the Caucasus
Mountains, described the Almastys he used to see as a youth in the
1930s.
Sightings have been recorded in writing as
far back as the 15th century. In 1430, Hans Schildtberger recorded his
personal observation of these creatures in the journal of his trip to
Mongolia as a prisoner of the Mongol Khan. There
is the story of Zana, said to have been a female Almasty who allegedly
lived in the isolated mountain village of T'khina, fifty miles from
Sukhumi in the Caucasus Mountains. Captured in the mountains in 1850,
she was at first aggressive towards her captors; but very soon became
domesticated and was supposedly even able to assist with simple
household chores.
Nikolai Przhevalsky was said to have observed the animals in Mongolia in 1871 .
A
reported encounter with a male Almasty in 1941, shortly after the
German invasion of what was then the USSR. According to the story, a
creature somewhat similar to Zana was found in the Caucasus Mountains
region by a detachment of the Red Army under the
control of a Lt. Col. Vargen Karapetyan. According to Karapetyan, the
beast was very human-like, but was covered in fine, dark hair.
Interrogation revealed the creature’s apparent inability to speak. The creature was later killed.
British anthropologist Myra Shackley wrote about Ivan
Ivlov's 1963 observation of a whole family of Almas. Ivlov, a
pediatrician, decided to interview some of the Mongolian children who
were his patients, and discovered that many of them had also seen Almas.
Russian researcher Alexei Sitnikov and his team reported an encounter that took place in 1993, on the journey to Lake Tonee.
On February 26th, 2003, the Russian journal Itogi (Balances) published an extensive article with the title 'The Soviet 'Snowman'.The authors reported that in
1986 Leonid Yershov, had found "Snowman" hairs in the Lovozero region
on the Kola peninsular in an expected 'Snowman' bed. The hairs were
handed over to the Murmansk Office of Forensic Medicine and the "complex
analyse" came to the conclusion that the hairs came not from any known
mammal from the region but from a vegetarian creature.
Some say they are simply wild humans who have adapted to living in caves and keeping themselves to themselves.So
the mystery continues. Are Almasty a relic hominid or an ape, or simply
people who chose to live wild ? All are theories that have been put
forward over the years. Maybe the next expedition will find some truth.
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