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- Yowie - Wikipedia
The Yowie is typically described as a bipedal, hairy, and ape-like creature, standing upright at between 2 1 m (6 ft 11 in) and 3 6 m (12 ft) [5] Reports of Yowie footprints describe them as significantly larger than a human's, [6] but alleged Yowie tracks are inconsistent in shape and toe number
- The Yowie: The Legendary Cryptid Of The Australian Outback - All Thats . . .
So, what is a Yowie? The legend of the Yowie starts with Australia’s Aboriginal people The Kuku Yalanji tribe of far north Queensland claim that they long co-existed with the Yowie, though it has reportedly attacked them on more than one occasion According to legend, there are two types of Yowie
- The Yowie: Elusive ‘Bigfoot’ of the Australian Outback
Yowie sightings have been consistently recorded since Europeans settled in Australia The first Yowie sighting on record was in an 1876 edition of the Australian Town and Country Journal, where it was notably called a Yahoo
- Australian Yowie Research - Home
As the Worlds #1 Yowie Website, it contains a massive amount of sightings and encounter reports, Yowie analysis, Expeditions and all the information you would ever need to know about the creature from all over the country dating back from the 1700s to today
- The Yowie: More Than Just Australia’s Bigfoot?
Some theories posit that the Yowie might be a bipedal marsupial, maybe descending from the extinct Hulitherium (a marsupial similar to a giant panda) of New Guinea But this lacks evidence and there are no similar creatures who were native to Australia in the fossil records
- The Australian Yowie: Mysterious Legends of a Tribe of Hairy People
The Yowie is their equivalent to what Native American tribes in Northwest America call Sasquatch Historical accounts refer to two types of Yowie in Australia with the most prominent species being Gigantopithecus
- The Yowie: A Mythical Creature in Australian Aboriginal Folklore
What is the cultural significance of the Yowie? The Yowie holds profound cultural significance for Aboriginal tribes, representing a powerful totem or spirit being It has also become a popular and iconic symbol in Australian popular culture
- Yowie: Animal Kingdom Resident or Hoax Down Under?
The Yowie animal is a towering, hairy cryptid, often called Australian Bigfoot, and the debate over its existence has been raging for centuries Reports of the yowie have sparked everything from Aboriginal legends to alleged sightings across the eastern Australian states
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