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2024年3月14日发(作者:)
Yeti: Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas
A tibetian fortress below the mountains were the Yeti is supposed to roam.
The Himalaya Mountains, the highest range on Earth, have been referred to as
the "roof of the world." If that is so, there is a mystery called the Yeti in our attic. In
Tibetan the word means "magical creature" and truly it is a seemingly supernatural
enigma in the shape of a hairy, biped creature that resembles a giant ape.
The Himalayas lie on the border between India, Nepal, and Tibet (now part of
China). They are remote and forbidding. Large stretches around these rough valleys
and peaks are uninhabited. The tallest mountain in the world, Everest, 29,028 feet
high, lies half in Nepal, half in China. It is from Nepal, though, that most attempts to
climb Everest, and the surrounding mountains, are made.
In Katmandu, the capitol of Nepal, a visitor finds himself immersed in the Yeti
legend. He is a commercial money maker for the tourist industry (there's even a Hotel
named the "Yak and the Yeti") as well as legend, religion and fantasy to some of the
Nepalese people.
The first reliable report of the Yeti appeared in 1925 when a Greek photographer,
N. A. Tombazi, working as a member of a British geological expedition in the
Himalayas, was shown a creature moving in the distance across some lower slopes.
The creature was almost a thousand feet away in a naira with an altitude of around
15,000 feet.
"Unquestionably, the figure in outline was exactly like a human being, walking
upright and stopping occasionally to uproot or pull at some dwarf rhododendron
bushes," said Tombazi, "It showed up dark against the snow and, as far as I could
make out wore no clothes."
The creature disappeared before Tombazi could take a photograph and was not
seen again. The group was descending, though, and the photographer went out of his
way to see the ground were he had spotted the creature. Tombazi found footprints in
the snow.
"They were similar in shape to those of a man, but only six to seven inches long
by four inches wide at the broadest part of the foot. The marks of five distinct toes and
the instep were perfectly clear, but the trace of the heel "
There were 15 prints to be found. Each was one and one half to two feet apart.
Then Tombazi lost the trail in thick brush. When the locals were asked to name the
beast he'd seen they told him it was a "Kanchenjunga demon." Tombazi didn't think
he'd seen a demon, but he couldn't figure out what the creature was either. Perhaps
he'd seen a wandering Buddhist or Hindu ascetic or hermit. As the years went by
though and other Yeti stories surfaced, Tombazi began to wonder if he'd seen one too.
Yeti reports usually come in the form of tracks found, pelts offered, shapes seen
at a distance, or rarely, actual face-to-face encounters with the creatures. Face to face
encounters never come with researchers looking for the Yeti, but with locals who
stumble into the creature during their daily lives.
Some of the best tracks ever seen were found and photographed by British
mountaineers Eric Shipton and Micheal Ward in 1951. They found them on the
southwestern slopes of the Menlung Glacier, which lies between Tibet and Nepal, at
an altitude of 20,000 feet. Each print was thirteen inches wide and some eighteen
inches long. The tracks seemed fresh and Shipton and Ward followed the trail for a
mile before it disappeared in hard ice.
Some scientists that viewed the photographs could not identify the tracks as from
any known creature. Others, though, felt
it was probably the trail of a languor
monkey or red bear. They noted the
tracks in snow, melted by the sun, can
change shape and grow larger. Even so,
the bear/monkey theory seems unlikely
as both of these animals normally move
on all four feet. The tracks were clearly
that of a biped.
Shipton's and Ward's reputations
argue against a hoax on their part and the
remoteness and height of the trail's location argues against them being hoaxed.
Shipton's footprints were not the first or last discovered by climbers among the
Himalayas. Even Sir Edmund Hillary and his Sherpa guide, Tenzing Norgay, on
their record ascent to the top of Mount Everest, in 1953, found giant foot prints on the
way up.
One of the more curious reports of a close encounter with a Yeti occurred in
1938. Captain d'Auvergue, the curator of the Victoria Memorial in Calcutta, India,
was traveling the Himalayas by himself when he became snow-blind. As he neared
death from exposure he was rescued by a nine foot tall Yeti that nursed him back to
health until d'Auvergue was able to return home by himself.
In many other stories, though, the Yeti hasn't been so benign. One Sherpa girl,
who was tending her yaks, described being surprised by a large ape-like creature with
black and brown hair. It started to drag her off, but seemed to be startled by her
screams and let her go. It then savagely killed two of her yaks. She escaped with her
life and the incident was reported to the police, who found footprints.
Several expeditions have been organized to track down the Yeti, but none have
found more than footprints and questionable artifacts like scalps and hides. The
London Daily Mail sent an expedition in 1954. American oil men Tom Slick and F.
Kirk Johnson financed trips in 1957, 58, and 59. Probably the most well-known
expedition went in 1960.
Sir Edmund Hillary, the same man that had first climbed Everest in 1953, lead
the 1960 trip in association with Desmond Doig. The expedition was sponsored by
the World Book Encyclopedia and was well outfitted with trip-wire cameras, as well
as time-lapse and infrared photography. Despite a ten-month stay the group failed to
find any convincing evidence of the existence of the Yeti. The artifacts they examined,
two skins and a scalp, turned out to belong to two blue bears and a sorrow goat.
At the time Hillary and Doig wrote off the Yeti as legend. Later, though, Doig
decided that the expedition had been too big and clumsy. They didn't see a Yeti, he
agreed, but nor did they observe such animals like the snow leopard which was
known to exist.
After spending thirty years in the Himalayas Doig believes that the Yeti is
actually three animals. The first is what the Sherpas call the "dzu teh." Large shaggy
animals that often attack cattle. Diog thinks this is probably the Tibetan blue bear. A
creature so rare it is known only in the west through a few skins, bones and a skull.
The second type, called "thelma," is probably a gibbon (a known type of ape) that
Diog thinks may live as far north as Nepal, though it's never been spotted past the
Brahmaputra River in India. The third Yeti, "mih teh," is the true abominable
snowman of legend. A savage ape, covered with black or red hair that lives at
altitudes of up to 20,000 feet.
So far there is no firm evidence to support the existence of the Yeti, but there is
no way show that he doesn't exist either. If he indeed lives in the barren, frozen, upper
reaches of the Himalayas where few men dare to tread, he may find his refuge safe for
a long time to come.
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