|
Teratology
means the study of monsters. |
Imaginary beasts lurk in the
legends of most countries of the world. Usually they are monsters, described as
mutants, or creatures with strange and horrible bodies. Although these beasts
can touch our deepest fears, they are very popular. It seems that people like
to be scared.
Who's Who of Beasts
| Who
|
Where
|
What
|
| Aigaumcha
|
Africa
|
A
tiny monster with eyes on its feet; its diet consists of human flesh.
|
| Al(s)
|
Armenia
|
These have iron teeth, brass claws and eat babies.
|
| Bunyip
|
Australia
|
A
water devil who hides in isolated wetlands and lakes and drowns
swimmers.
|
| Galactic ghoul
|
Solar system
|
A
force in space some 35 million miles from Earth on the way to Mars. It
supposedly causes electrical or mechanical problems with spacecraft in the
area.
|
| Kappa
|
Japan
|
An
ugly green monster with a monkey's head and a turtle's shell, it drags people
into its watery home to eat them.
|
| Logaroo
|
Caribbean Islands
|
Like vultures by day, they shed their skin at night, hide in fog, and
suck blood from their victims.
|
| Manticora
|
West Indies
|
A
lion with human features, eyes that burn blue fire, and deadly quills it can
shoot from its tail.
|
| New Jersey devil
|
U.S.
|
Part ram, part kangaroo with bat wings, a horse's feet, and a pointed
tail, this bellowing monster kills barnyard animals.
|
| Ping feng
|
China
|
A
huge, piglike beast, with a head at each end, that attacks people and other
animals.
|
| Rakshasa
|
India
|
A
beast who appears in any ugly shape, it comes from nowhere to kill its victims
with a single scratch from its poisonous tail.
|
| Vodyany
|
Eastern Europe
|
A
green-haired monster with horns, paws, and blood-red eyes. Its victims are
swimmers.
|
|