The Borneo Post

New report reveals bear facts about the Yeti

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PARIS: Legend-slaying scientists yesterday dismantled the myth of the abominable snowman, the towering yet furtive half-human rumoured for centuries to inhabit inaccessib­le reaches of the Himalayas.

It turns out, they report in the Royal Society journal Proceeding­s B, that the long- sought creature, also known as Yeti, is in fact a bear.

Or three different bears, to be precise: the Asian black, the Tibetan brown and Himalayan brown.

Each of these sub- species inhabits different niches on the roof the world, and all of them have probably been mistaken at one time or another for the ‘Wild Man of the Snows,’ the scientists said.

“Our findings strongly suggest that the biological underpinni­ngs of the Yeti legend can be found in local bears,” said lead scientist Charlotte Lindqvist, associate professor at the University of Buffalo College of Arts and Sciences.

The study is not the first to reduce the myth to bear facts, but it does amass an unpreceden­ted wealth of genetic evidence gleaned from bone, tooth, skin, hair and fecal samples previously attributed to the cryptic creatures.

The artefacts – from private collection­s and museums around the world, including a monastic relic said to come from a Yeti paw – were, in reality, the remains of 23 distinct bears, they found.

Lindqvist and her team reconstruc­ted the complete mitochondr­ial genomes of each specimen, leading to important discoverie­s about the region’s beleaguere­d carnivores and their evolutiona­ry back story. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo of an actor dressed as a ‘Yeti’ waves from a tour bus during a promotiona­l event for Travel Channel’s ‘Expedition Unknown: Hunt for the Yeti’ in Manhattan, New York City. — Reuters photo
File photo of an actor dressed as a ‘Yeti’ waves from a tour bus during a promotiona­l event for Travel Channel’s ‘Expedition Unknown: Hunt for the Yeti’ in Manhattan, New York City. — Reuters photo

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