Is this mystery statue, which is to be found in the International Cryptozoology Museum, a stylized native art example of a Proto-Pygmy form of an unknown hominoid?
The alleged origin is noted on a small label on its back. It says, “Made in Indonesia.” I obtained the figurine from an American zoological park’s gift shop, during one of my travels. The clerk had no additional information about it, other than what existed on that tiny label.
It is an ape. There is no tail.
It is not a monkey. It has five toes that seem to be hominid. Furthermore, it is apparently too bipedal to represent the known apes from southern Asia, i.e. the orangutans and the gibbons. The robustness and represented gender may indicate it is a replica of a small hominid that may be a pregnant.
What is it?
At first look, this figurine remarkably resembles one from Africa.
Christian Le Noel told me the statue shown below was from Tanzania and represented an agogwe. However, Jean luc Drevillion then informed me that this was incorrect. Drevillion said it is a statuette of kara-komba, also known as the bush dwarf or toulou, which is the local form of the Proto-Pygmies to be found in the Central African Republic.
Merci – Christian Le Noel & Philippe Bloch, Loren
Is there a link to this wooden representation of a Proto-Pygmy, the Agogwe from Africa, and the one in the museum?
How does it match some images and replicas of the Australian Yowies?
The above is an eyewitness drawing of a Yowie from Australia.
Click on the image above to make the Yowie larger, as seen here on the cover of The Yowie: In Search of Australia’s Bigfoot. Examine those knees.
Look at Kilcoy, Australia’s Yowie’s knees.
What if we turn to Indonesia?
These field drawings of the Orang Pendek are based on Debbie Martyr’s and others’ sightings. They are identikit pictures, drawn by a WWF artist from several independent, but very consistent descriptions of the Sumatran Orang Pendek. They show an upright ape that many of the forest villagers consider a commonplace part of their local natural history. Note the knees, the ears, nose and the general stance, as compared to the ICM’s mystery statue. (Sumatra, of course, is part of Indonesia.)
This is the sleeping position of an Almas seen in the Gobi Desert, Mongolia.
Please take a closer look at the mystery statue, the Agogwe one, the Almas, the wooden Kilcoy Yowie, the illustrated Yowies, and the witness-inspired likenesses of the Orang Pendek. They all appear to have calluses on their knees, which have been explained by Russian field researchers as a result of the above reported sleeping position, demonstrated for the Almas.
These hairy hominoids’ heavily callused knees are sometimes referred to as “camel knees,” because of their obvious likeness to the knees of camels. The hardening of the skin of the knees in camels is due to the evolutionary fact that the camel’s knees (as shown in the Bactrian above) were adapted for bending down on the sands of its native Gobi desert, to rest and sleep.
What does the ICM’s mystery statue actually illustrate? Is it from Indonesia?
Follow CryptoZooNews
Not Found
The resource could not be found.