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Revision as of 01:16, 31 May 2020

In Russian folklore, the Chuchuna is an entity said to dwell in Siberia. It has been described as six to seven feet tall and covered with dark hair.[citation needed]

Soviet Union

In 1928, the Soviets sent out an expedition team to gather information about the Chuchuna near the Indigirka and Yana rivers. There they claimed to have found that Chuchuna were remarkably similar to the Mulen (Almas).[citation needed]

Description

According to the native accounts from the nomadic Yakut and Tungus tribes, it is a well built, Neanderthal-like man wearing pelts as clothes and bearing a white patch of fur on its forearms. It is said to occasionally consume human flesh, unlike their close cousins, the Almastis. Some witnesses reported seeing a tail on the creature's corpse. It is described as being roughly six to seven feet tall.[citation needed]

See also

References

  • Gurvich, I.S. (1975). Гурвич И.С. Таинственный чучуна (история одного этнографического поиска) [Mysterious Chuchun (the story of an ethnographic search)]. Moscow: Thought.
  • Anikin, A.E. (1999). "On the Yakut names of wild people" (PDF). Languages and folklore of the indigenous peoples of Siberia. 5.