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Carolina Parakeet
The Carolina Parakeet is a cryptid classified as a Lazarus Taxon (an animal believed to be extinct but then found alive again). The Carolina Parakeet was first described in 1891 and goes by the scientific name Conuropsis carolinensis. It’s a small bird with green plumage that has sections of yellow and orange. It is the only bird in the parakeet family native to North America and could be found in South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. Due to their tendency to eat fruit, many were killed en mass by farmers. This along with them being sold as pets, or used as decorations for women’s hats, led to their extinction. The last…
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Camp Chipmunk/Tigermunks
The Camp Chipmunks are powerful creatures from Lumberjack Folklore. They were once normal sized chipmunks but grew massive after eating countless prune pits left behind by the camp cooks of Paul Bunyan. They have been known to lift their tails and scream into the moonlight. Despite their strength and ferocity, they are thought to be cowards at heart. They became so strong that they killed all the bears and mountain lions in the area, until they were hunted down and killed by Paul Bunyan and his men. Citations: Bane, Theresa. Encyclopedia of Beasts and Monsters in Myth, Legend and Folklore. United States, McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, 2016. Lewis, Allen, and Stevens,…
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Mt. Cameron Yeti Alien
The Mt. Cameron Yeti Alien was sighted in June 1932 at Mt. Cameron, in Colorado. It was sighted by a man named William Lamb. He found tracks measuring 17 inches long and 4-6 inches wide. He saw a fireball dropping from the sky which vanished and transformed into a creature. It stood 8 feet tall and resembled the yeti. The creature started chasing him, and he eventually managed to escape by jumping off a cliff onto a pine tree. He believes this is the same creature as the yeti from the Himalayas. Citations: Rosales, Albert. Humanoid Encounters 1930-1949: The Others Amongst Us. N.p., CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2016.
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Calopus
The Calopus is a hybrid creature from Medieval heraldry. They have wolf-like bodies, feet, and tails, with cat-like heads and serrated horns. Citations: Bane, Theresa. Encyclopedia of Beasts and Monsters in Myth, Legend and Folklore. United States, McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, 2016.
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Callopode
allThe Callopode is a strange creature from Lumberjack Folklore. It has the “scientific name” Musicacorpus tryoni. They make music at the start of spring. They breathe in through a hollow knot on top of their heads and breathe out through their trumpet-like noses. They have been known to cover some of the holes from the five rows on its chest to change the sound. Citations: Yarns of the Big Woods, Written and Illustrated by Art Childs
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Callitrice/Callitrix
The Callitrice is a mythical creature from Medieval myth. They resemble Satyrs with long beard, and long thick tails. They’re thought to live in desolate parts of Ethiopia, and tend to hide from humans. Though they are very hard to find, they’re thought to be easy to capture. Citations: Bane, Theresa. Encyclopedia of Beasts and Monsters in Myth, Legend and Folklore. United States, McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, 2016.
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La Calchona/Chiludo
La Calchona is a mythical creature from South America whose name means “ghost” or “bogeyman.” It sometimes looks like a large, bearded man covered in sheep-like wool, but in Chile its thought to look like a large dog with tangled wooly fur. It’s nocturnal and lives in fields and hills. They mostly just scare horses and travelers and sometimes steal food. Citations: Bane, Theresa. Encyclopedia of Beasts and Monsters in Myth, Legend and Folklore. United States, McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, 2016.
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Caladrius
The Caladrius is a creature that resembles a white bird and is capable of predicting the fate of a sick person, either death or recovery. If the bird is placed next to a sick person and looks away, the person will die; if it looks at the person then it will absorb the illness from the person. It takes the absorbed illness and burns it off, allowing it to flow away into the wind. Looking at the bird was thought to cure jaundice and its droppings were capable of healing the blind. Citations: Bane, Theresa. Encyclopedia of Beasts and Monsters in Myth, Legend and Folklore. United States, McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers,…
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Cailleac Bhuer/Black Annis/Blue Hag/Stone Woman
Cailleac Bhuer is a monster from Scottish folklore. She appears as a monstrous old woman with blue skin and a single eye, and when seen on the road, she often presents herself as a struggling old woman. She is believed to haunt moors and rocky passes. She is viciously hungry and targets lone travelers, beating her victims over the head to knock them out, and dragging them away to be consumed. She sits on a pile of human bones and when human prey is unavailable she kills livestock. She often has a crow on her shoulder that acts as a familiar. Citations: Maberry, Jonathan. Vampire Universe: The Dark World of…
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Cagrino
The Cagrino is from Roma mythology. They are demonic yellow hedgehogs that are one and a half feet in length and width. They ride horses to exhaustion causing them sickness and tangled hair. They can be kept from horses by tying them to stakes covered in garlic juice and making a cross from red thread and laying it on the ground. They can also be repelled by making bread from the horse’s hair along with salt, meal, and bat blood, rubbing the bread on the horse’s hooves, then hiding the mixing bowl used to make this bread and saying “Tarry, pipkin, in this tree, till such time as full ye be.”…