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For
many disbelievers only a personal experience could ever convince them
of the Yowie's existence.
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To
read excerpts from
GIANTS FROM
THE DREAMTIME
The YOWIE in Myth and Reality
Click any Below Chapter (eg: Chapter
1 )
Contents / About the Author / Dedications / Acknowledgements / Forward / Introduction
Chapter 1 / Chapter 2 / Chapter 3 / Chapter 4 / Chapter 5 / Chapter 6 / Chapter 7 / Chapter 8 / Chapter 9 / Chapter 10 / Chapter 11 Chapter 12 / Chapter 13 / Chapter 14 / Chapter 15 / Chapter 16 / Chapter 17 / Chapter 18 / Chapter 19 / Chapter 20 / Chapter 21
In Search of Little Men-The Lost Pgymy Tribes of Australia
So far as we have studied
the mythical and legendary background of the Yowie mystery in ancient Aboriginal
Australia, and the available fossil and archaeological evidence demonstrating
that the "hairy man" was/is actually more than one race; as demonstrated
by the physical descriptions of early European settler's eyewitness accounts,
and which is about to be further vindicated in the modern-day reports gathered
by the author from around Australia in the following chapters.
As we have seen, there were giant-size as well as modern human size "hairy
men", and there were also the "little hairy men", pygmy-size
forms found in Aboriginal traditions Australia-wide, all of which were collectively
included under the overall title of "hairy man"by our Aboriginal
people.
While it is certain that many of the "little hairy people" were
smallish forest-dwelling Australoids, such as the better known Atherton Tableland
'pygmy' Aboriginals - and it seems certain similar forms of these once inhabited
[or still do] the mountainous forestlands further south, even to Tasmania
- others have been claimed to exist in Australia's interior.
Yet what of the small, hairy ape-like forms recorded in Aboriginal traditions?
These cannot be confused with the young of the larger creatures of this description,
for the Aborigines claim they are a definite pygmy-size race on their own;
and even here there are both herbivorous, as well as omnivorous tool-making,
even fire-making forms.
This chapter shall concern itself with these "little hairy people"
before we move onto the modern-day evidence of surviving larger relict hominid
and hominoid forms of the "hairy man".
The term "hairy man" was applied by the Aborigines to all non-Aboriginal
races with whom they shared this continent, whether they were 'hairy' or not,
and in the course of attempting to unravel the Yowie mystery I have had to
work my way through a maze of hominid and hominoid forms, often linking a
number of giant or smaller-size "hairy men" known by many different
Aboriginal names scattered across vast distances of Australia under one single
race or another.
This book presents the reader with a selection of reports and other evidence
that primitive survivors from the dawn of human evolution still roam remote
regions of our continent, and yet it is but a small portion of the over 3,000
case histories and other evidence gathered by me in the course of a lifetime's
dedicated, self-funded research, the results of almost 45 years of my life.
I stand by the evidence I have presented. Time will vindicate me.
There is a mystery lurking in the dense rainforests of Queensland's far north,
which after generations of European settlement of the region has still not
been laid to rest.
It concerns traditions of both Aborigines as well as European settlers, of
a race of primitive stone-age people often confused with the Yowie in old
folklore, called the 'Junjdy' or "little hairy red men", but who
call themselves the Birranbindins. They are in effect, the lost pygmy tribes
of far north Queensland.
They were described as little black-skinned hairy natives, no taller than
1 to 1.3 metres tall, who inhabited the forests feeding upon vegetable food,
forest animals, killing and eating any Aborigines they happened to catch.
The Aborigines ruthlessly hunted and killed the Birranbindins at every opportunity.
This had the effect of driving them deeper into the mountains. The truth was,
the Birranbindins were shy, timid natives who feared the Aborigines, avoiding
them at every opportunity.
It was once thought by scientists that these little forest natives were a
separate race which had preceded the Aborigines to Australia, for their negroid-like
rounded heads and crinkly black hair is deceptive. However, these features
and the smallish stature are typical of natives who have lived for generations
in a darkened forest environment, existing upon forest foods. The north Queensland
pygmy's are in fact Australoid rather than Negroid, and probably related to
the former Tasmanian Aborigines whose features were identical, although these
people were slightly taller.
Even so, the coastal and inland Aborigines did not regard these smaller Australoids
as their own kind. Linking them with the Yowies, they were known as the 'Jundjdy',
or "little hairy red men", alluding to their fine body hair, which
could sometimes be a reddish colour.
The 'Junjdy' traditions cover the length and breadth of the far north Queensland
mountain ranges, but as it will also be demonstrated, they were also known
to the forests of the Gulf country and Arnhem Land.
Further traditions also place tribal groups in southern Qld, far northern
NSW, as far south as the rugged mountain country north of the Blue Mountains
west of Sydney. Pygmy-size natives have also been reported seen in the vast
Kanangra Boyd National Park, south-west of Katoomba, and on down the south
coastal mountain ranges, while others will be met with even in Central Australia
in the course of this book.
European settlers first learnt of the 'Junjdy' from coastal Aborigines about
125 years ago, that they had the tribal name of Birranbindin, and that they
had a tribal language which the coastal Aborigines understood - Yidigii.
It was not long before the Birranbindins began creating a nuisance of themselves,
making frequent raids upon lonely farms stealing vegetables and killing stock.
This soon led to reprisals by settlers, and a call for police protection.
In "Among Cannibals" by Carl Lumholtz, a Norwegian zoologist who
spent 14 months, from 1882-1883 amongst the Aborigines of the Herbert River
district, west of Ingham, Qld, it is said that the early settlers of the Atherton
rainforest commented on the small stature of the forest tribes and Atherton's
first policeman, Constable Hansen was dispatched to supply rations to these
natives to reduce the incidence of foraging raids on crops grown by settlers.
The "Cairns Post" of 20th June, 1889 reports:
"We understand that Constable Hansen has brought in sixteen of the blacks
who have for so long been a course of annoyance and loss to the settlers about
Evelyn. They belong to the Karamia and lower Johnstone River tribes, and are
described as powerful and well-conditioned people, beside whom the Aboriginals
of the scrub about Atherton look miserable beings".
Excerpts
from my 2001 Book "Giants From the Dreamtime-The Yowie in Myth and Reality.
Available Now. To Order Your Copy Details Are On The Main
Homepage.
To Continue Reading Click On Image
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Below For Chapter 7
Chapter
7
Tasmania's Hairy
Giants
Chapter 7
Click any Below Chapter (eg: Chapter 1 )
Contents / About the Author / Dedications / Acknowledgements / Forward / Introduction
Chapter 1 / Chapter 2 / Chapter 3 / Chapter 4 / Chapter 5 / Chapter 6 / Chapter 7 / Chapter 8 / Chapter 9 / Chapter 10 / Chapter 11 Chapter 12 / Chapter 13 / Chapter 14 / Chapter 15 / Chapter 16 / Chapter 17 / Chapter 18 / Chapter 19 / Chapter 20 / Chapter 21
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© Rex Gilroy 1959-2002 &
Beyond or Subsequent Photographers.
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