Yeren

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Inscription at the entrance to the "Yeren Cave" in western Hubei Province

The Yeren (Chinese: 野人; pinyin: yěrén; literally "wild-man"), variously referred to as the Yiren, Yeh Ren, Chinese Wildman, (Chinese: 神农架野人; pinyin: Shénnóngjiàyěrén; literally "The Wildman of Shennongjia"), Man-Monkey, or (Chinese: 人熊; pinyin: Ren Xiong; literally "Man Bear"), is a legendary creature said to be an as yet undiscovered hominid residing in the mountainous forested regions of China's remote Hubei province.1

Contents

Description

Witnesses typically report the creatures to be covered in reddish-brown hair. Some white specimens have also been sighted. Their height is estimated to range from five to seven feet, although some colossal examples allegedly in excess of ten feet tall have been reported.

Official interest

Regional officials have recorded nearly four hundred sightings since the 1920s. Since the 1980s, government on a local and national level has likewise taken a keen interest in the creatures, distributing posters that request sighting reports and physical evidence, and supporting scientists who choose to study the yeren.citation needed

In 1980, a Chinese team claimed to have found a dozen nests, some in trees and some on the ground, in an area called Fengshuyang in the Zhejiang province.2

Theories

Some researchers have drawn a link between the Yeren and the extinct hominid Gigantopithecus, which formerly inhabited the region. Many of the local caves are rich in the fossilized bones of the animal, although whether Gigantopithecus was capable of any meaningful bipedal motion is a matter of debate.

The yeren has also been hypothesized as a new species of orangutan, one that is ground-dwelling, bipedal and native to mainland Asia instead of Borneo or Sumatra.

It is also thought that the yeren might just be a legend. The Yeren apparently dwells in a region already rich with superstition and strange phenomena, including an inordinate occurrence of albinism in the local fauna, adding to its mystique. It has been connected with ancient Chinese legends of magical forest ogres and man-like bears.

In popular culture

See also

References

External links

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 4 November 2008, at 20:00.

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