The yeti is
without question not Bigfoot. It may
have been the partner in a hybrid that produced Bigfoot. DNA work does presently support such a
possibility, but not strongly enough to be definitive. This opens the door to a far more dangerous
creature than Bigfoot has proven to be.
Cultural source also confirm this.
This attack
reads like something I would expect from a weasel in a hen house. All chickens dead. What is missing here is site evidence in the
form of tracks likely because the discovery was made too late. The cut tent was likely someone inside the
tent cutting himself out to confront the threat itself.
It is also
noteworthy that the tongue was missing.
After this blood bath, the creature likely ate and soft tissue is always
the first choice. Other missing parts
are not mentioned that I am aware off.
At the same time I do not expect a yeti to be a big meat eater at all
anyway. I would be really impressed if a
liver was missing.
An alternative
explanation would be a giant sloth. The
actual attack pattern conforms except the bodies were left behind which does
not conform. Perhaps in winter such
kills are simply left behind until it thaws.
The probability of this is very low of course.
Mysterious
Deaths Of College Students Blamed On 'Russian Yeti'
Posted: 05/29/2014 11:12
am EDT Updated: 05/29/2014 3:59 pm EDT
Investigators baffled by
the unexplained and gruesome deaths of Russian college students decades ago
have come up with a new suspect, albeit an unlikely one: the Yeti.
On February 2, 1959, nine
college students climbed the icy slopes of Dyatlov Pass in the Ural Mountains
of Russia. They never made it out alive. The students bodies were found with
broken ribs and fractured skulls. In one grotesque case, a woman's eyes had
been gouged out and her tongue was missing.
At the time of the
tragedy, investigators cryptically declared the Dyatlov Pass deaths were due to
a "compelling natural force," according to a new television
documentary reexamining the case.
Since the massacre
occurred during the Cold War, some have speculated the students were killed by
a top secret Soviet weapon. Others claim an indigenous tribe lashed out at the
hikers for trespassing.
However, the murder site
doesn't seem to jibe with those explanations:
A new documentary, "Russian Yeti:
The Killer Lives" airing June 1 on the
Discovery Channel explores the remote possibility that a "menk" --
the Russian word for Yeti -- may have been responsible.
Considering the existence of the Yeti has never been proven,
blaming it for the grisly deaths is a stretch. But there are some strange
aspects to the massacre, according to explorer Mike Libecki, the star of the
program.
For instance, one of
the tents was slashed from the inside and some of the victims left their
clothing behind in subzero weather.
Even stranger to Libecki
has been the Russian government's suppression of the autopsy and other reports
for 30 years.
“I’ve spent a lot of time alone in the mountains and have had my share of near-death experiences,” he said in a press release. “I know if I went missing, I’d want my family to know what happened to me.”
In order to explore the
Yeti theory, Libecki visited Russia to meet with Yeti expert Igor Burtsev of
the International Center of Hominology.
"He's the world's leading
expert on the Russian Yeti," Libecki said on the documentary. "He's
dedicated his entire life to search for this creature."
Burtsev, 73, says he has
"mountains of evidences" suggesting the creature's existence in the
Ural mountains, but "nobody wants to see them."
Based on his research,
Burtsev says the Russian Yeti is most notable for large feet.
"They have bigger
foot than the human, and they have short necks, almost without necks," he
said on the show. "[The footprints are] everywhere. For last 50 years,
I've find signs of Yeti, confirmed by reports of eyewitnesses. They're about
5,000."
Libecki is impressed by
Burtsev's data.
"That's a huge
number of sightings for a creature that supposedly doesn't exist," he
said.
The complete findings won't
be announced until the documentary airs Sunday night, but the documentary's
title, "Russian Yeti: The Killer Lives," might provide a subtle clue.
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