The
Indian Army had tweeted on the 29th of April that it spotted
footprints that supposedly belonged to the mythical creature that
lives in the Himalayas, according to legend.
Business
Standard :
Propelled by fascination for the unknown, a variety of creatures,
from the abominable Himalayan snowman to its North American cousin
Bigfoot,
often cross over from myth into reality even though there is little
evidence to back their existence.
As
it was last fortnight when the Indian Army rekindled the Yeti
mystery with its tweet showing pictures of large footprints in the
snow in the higher Himalayas and claimed they belonged to the
abominable snowman.
Experts
believe the possible reasons behind the enduring obsession with the
beings that inhabit the nebulous worlds of legend and folklore and
ever so frequently enter the realm of everyday life are many -- from
human curiosity and the need to connect with the past to identifying
threats to the survival of humankind.
Loch
Ness, Unicorn
and Almas... the list of such creatures is long, cutting across
regions and cultures.
The
correlation between imagination and imagined reality is once again
under the scanner with the Indian Army releasing pictures and videos
of footprints captured close to the Makalu Base Camp in Nepal in
March.
In
Nepali folklore, Yeti is a mythical bipedal ape-like creature taller
than an average human and is said to inhabit the Himalayas, Siberia,
Central and East Asia.
Nepali
officials later clarified the footprints belong to the Himalayan
Black Bear active in the area.
"As
we get farther from the real wild, we seek talismans to connect us to
the wild. A half-man, half-ape creature is such a symbol. It gives
humanity an identity as an animal in a world where we are otherwise
making everything of human manufacture," said American
conservationist Daniel C Taylor who has spent 35 years in Nepal's
Barun Valley dispelling the Yeti myth.
"I
researched from 1956, when at age 11 I saw my first photograph of the
footprint so I knew there was a real animal, to 1983 when I explained
scientifically that it was the Himalayan Black Bear," Taylor,
who is also the author of the 2017 book, 'Yeti: The Ecology of a
Mystery', told PTI.
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