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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
Tasmania's Hairy Giants
The island of Tasmania
is not without its share of 'hairy man' traditions, extending back through
pioneering times to pre-European, Aboriginal antiquity.
The presence of Tasmania's 'hairy men' certainly pre-dates the close of the
last ice-age and the flooding of the former Bass Strait land-bridge. And although
the surviving population of these creatures may be much smaller compared to
mainland numbers, sighting claims persist to the present day, as will be shown.
The ancient Tasmanian Aboriginal race is now extinct, but their language remains
preserved and with it, some of the names by which the 'hairy man' of Tasmania
was known, one of which was 'Yowie'. This name is obviously of considerable
antiquity in Tasmanian Aboriginal culture, for it would have to have been
introduced from the Victorian mainland before the submergence of the Bass
Strait land-bridge [ie prior to 12,000 years ago] .
As the following list shows, the 'hairy man' was known by a variety of names
over a vast area of Tasmania, depending upon the various dialects spoken by
the different tribes.
Kolin Bugaloo 'Man
who is object of terror' or 'terrible man'
Koro Woon-duble 'thunder man' [alluding to his powerful voice]
Makoron Koro 'hairy man'
Poinglyenna Pugganna 'hairy man'
Booang Koro 'abominable man'
Moorram-marren Kolin 'great hairy man'
Moorram-marren goo lee 'hairy black man'
Moorram-marren goon-deetch 'hairy race'
"Great Hairy
Man' traditions among the former Tasmanian Aboriginal race are undoubtedly
of considerable antiquity, for like the mainland tribes, they believed the
'hairy race' had always inhabited this part of Australia, even before the
appearance of the first Aborigines. And as with the mainland tribes, the Tasmanians
believed these creatures were totally unlike themselves - a separate race.
Evidence of the existence in Tasmania of another people in ice-age times recently
came to light in the Franklin river rock shelters. Primitive stone tools of
Java type appearance were found by archaeologists together with remains of
cooked meals dating no later than 14,000 and 20,000 years BP.
Furthermore, on lonely Curtis Island, once part of the Bass Strait land-bridge,
this author, in the course of an expedition there in June 1984, found a large
fossil man-like footprint. These finds make it quite clear that the Tasmanian
Aborigines were not alone. Other men, or near-men shared the island long after
its separation from the Victorian mainland. Among these were obviously a race
of primitive creatures, known by various names but all describing beings of
often large muscular build. Something out of the ordinary, a "great hairy
man".
During the 1820's tales were rife , among the settlers of the Tasmanian interior,
of another more mysterious race of hominids that shared the island with its
Aboriginal population. The often large, hairy 'Bugaloos', or "hairy men"
as they were commonly known to the Europeans.
Like the mainland Yowies or Doolagards, they were said to stand taller than
a normal human, were strong, muscular beasts who were terrifying to look upon,
and which inhabited the mountains and valleys of the interior, living upon
herbivorous food, as well as native wild life and occasionally domestic stock.
Tasmania was then a wild, untamed wilderness in which any unknown creatures
could very easily have escaped detection. With the clearing of many areas
for settlement the native population was forced further back from the coastal
regions into the still wild interior. This too, became the last bastion of
the "Bugaloos", for their sightings soon became increasingly rarer,
until by the early years of the 20th century European sightings of these hairy
hominids finally declined.
The reasons for this decline could have involved a loss of habitat, coupled
with the depredations of the native population who hunted them down at every
opportunity.
Perhaps the most sensational of early accounts of the Tasmanian Yowie took
place during the 1820's. The O'Rourke family went up into the hills from New
Norfolk above Hobart, to establish a farm in the wilderness of the Hamilton
district.
In time word spread that an O'Rourke woman had given birth to a half-man,
half-animal like creature, its jaw protruding like a muzzle. It had prominent
teeth. It's head was covered entirely with hair and it had long finger nails.
Eventually the family chained the creature up in a cage where it would crouch
like an animal, snarling at all who ventured near it, waving its arms about,
which were longer than a human's.
The woman in question was supposed to have met a 'Bugaloo' man-beast and befriended
the creature, trying to coax it into the farm,. apparently believing him to
be "a man who had gone wild when he was young". The fate of the
child is unknown following its eventual release into the wilderness.
A number of 'hairy people' were rumoured by settlers to exist in the bush
country around Burnie. This part of north-western Tasmania was rich in Aboriginal
traditions of hairy monsters, and even today old tales persist, of settlers
who went missing in the bush, taken it was believed at the time, by one or
more of these creatures.
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
Or
Below For Chapter 8
Chapter
8
Victoria's Great
Hairy Men
Chapter 8
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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Beyond or Subsequent Photographers.
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