Mapinguari

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File:Mapinguari statue, Parque Ambiental Chico Mendes, Rio Branco, Brazil.jpg
Mapinguari statue, Parque Ambiental Chico Mendes, Rio Branco, Brazil

Mapinguari or mapinguary are mythical monstrous jungle-dwelling spirits from Brazilian folklore. They are said to protect the Amazon rainforest and its animals. According to folklore, when humans grow too old they can transform into man-eating Mapinguari.

They have either a gaping mouth on the stomach or a mouth split open from throat to belly. Their dense hair makes them bulletproof, except around the navel. They have a single eye on their foreheads, like a cyclops, at least in more recent ethnography.

Terminology

Casudo and later commentators speculate the name mapinguari to be a Tupi-Guarani compound mbaé-pi-guari (Guarani: Script error: No such module "Lang". "that, the thing"[1] + Script error: No such module "Lang". "foot"[2] + Script error: No such module "Lang". "crooked, twisted"[3]) meaning "the thing that has a clubbed, twisted, or backwards-turned foot".Template:Sfnp[4]

Mapingurai is known to the Karitiana people as Script error: No such module "Lang". (Karitiâna: "laughing beast"), Script error: No such module "Lang". ("beast with black face") or Script error: No such module "Lang". (lit. "maternal grandfather" or "mother's brother's son").Template:Sfnp[5][6]

The Mapunguari also answers to the segamai of the Machiguenga people, according to some commentators.[7][6] However, ethnologist Glenn H. Shepard, who conducted the fieldwork among the Machiguenga of Peru and obtained testimonies about the segamaiTemplate:Sfnp had focused on a different Machiguenga mythical being as comparable to the Mapinguari, namely the so-called oshetoniro ("mother of spider monkeys"), a large monkey-like creature "equipped with demonic powers and gigantic penises. They can summon wind and darkness, cause panic and confusion, and are said to rape and kill human victims". Shepard not only stated the oshetoniro may be a variant of the Brazilian Mapinguari, but added these may both be folkloric memories of the ground sloth (cf. Template:Section link).[8][9]Template:EfnTemplate:Refn

The juma has been listed as an alias for mapinguari,[6]Template:Sfnp but Candace Slater distinguish the two as different beings,[10] though both of them together with "Matinta-Perera" (alias of Saci) are grouped together as "Curupiras" by her.[11]

Description

There are various depictions of the mapinguari. It is a man-eater,[12] and may eat the victim head-first, plunging the victim's head in the long gaping oral cavity (that runs from nose to stomach, cf. Template:Section link) and chewing slowly.Template:SfnpTemplate:Refn While legend says it only devours the head,Template:Refn one documented rubber tapper witness has seen the creature devour the entire body piecemeal: the head, limbs, entrails, and torso of a man fallen victim.[13]Template:Refn

It was still believed to haunt the forests of Pará, Amazonas and Acre into the 20th century.[12]

The lore of the Template:Linktext giant mapinguari may well be a composite, taking on the characteristics of the Gorjala (a giant or gigantes[14]), the Pé de Garrafa ("bottle footed"[15]), the invulnerability, the inverted feet of the Curupira and Matutiú (black-haired, long-armed and clawed giant).Template:Refn[12] Its giant stature is cloaked by long black hair, it has long arms and clawed hand, etc.[16][12]

It is not nocturnal like other monsters, but lies in wait in the dim light of the depth of the forest by daylight, and lunges to attack. It also announces itself with heavy screaming, frightening the humans into terrified flight.Template:Sfnp Cascudo suspects this to be relatively young lore, found in the narrative of the rubber tappers, since the old chroniclers of the colonial period do not mention it.Template:Sfnp

The mapinguari (mapinguary) in the Purus River basin of Amazonas is described as a gigantic monkey, as hairy as a Script error: No such module "Lang". (spider monkey), with donkey hooves for feet that are turned backwards (like the Curupira),Template:RefnTemplate:Refn This description was by a witness who was a Template:Linktext at a rubber plantation who liked to go hunting, and one Sunday, dragged along his co-worker roommate with who he shared the same hut or tent,Template:Efn though the latter was against not observing the day of rest (cf. Template:Section link). They got separated in the woods, and then the man saw his tent-companion devoured by such a mapinguari, which had jaguar-like claws and a mouth (lower jaw?) "as big as lapel",Template:Efn "torn" to the level of the stomach (interpreted to mean a mouth split from around the face to its stomach).[13]

Transformations of old men

The lore of the state of Acre tells that Indians who attain an advanced age transform into this monster, and describes it as having an alligator-like hard-shelled skin, with identical feet like the (ends of) a pestle or Brazil nut capsules.Template:EfnTemplate:Refn

The mapinguari has been recorded in the belief among the Macuna of Colombia as a man-eater, greatly feared. It was supposed that men who grow too old turned into these. The custom existed among the Indians of the Yotahy (Jotahy) River of killing the superannuated for fear they will turn into Mapinguaris.[17]

In a book on rubber farming, one informant has told it to be an "ancient king of the region".Template:Refn

Some folklore also describe it as a former human shaman turned into a hairy humanoid cyclops.[18]Template:Better source needed

Cf. also Quibungo (aged black Brazilians turned monster) described below.

Mouth in abdomen

This traditional mapinguari is often said to have a gaping mouth on its abdomen,[7] with its feet turned backwards, as already testified by the rubber-tapper of the Purus River basin, Amazonas.[13] Creatures with such feet, which confuse those trying to track it, are found in folklore around the world.[18]

A parallel can be found in the legendary Quibungo, a monster which old black men turned into,[19] which also has a strange gaping mouth running from nose to stomachTemplate:Sfnp (or throat to stomach[20]) from which the Mapinguari may have borrowed the trait.Template:Sfnp[21] Though the Quibungo according to some accounts has its mouth on its back.[22]Template:Sfnp

Thus the alternative description is not a mouth at the stomach, but an oral cavity that slits vertically from face/throat to navel, as already touched upon in the rubber-tapper's testimony above.[13]

Also, the spot around its navel is the only place where a gunshot would penetrate, and elsewhere his dense hair makes him invulnerable to bullets.[12][23]

Christian element

The hunter's encounter with the Mapniguari contextualized as punishment for breaking Sabbath on Sunday is seen as a Christian influence.Template:Sfnp The hunter goes out to hunt game saying "one goes hungry even on a Sunday" despite his wife's warning — tale published by Galeano (2014),[23] as well as the version edited by Silva Campos (1928), where the tapper defended his hunting habit saying "one still must eat on Sunday".[13] The "Catholic catechism" had already been noted by Cascudo (1976) who writes that the Mapniguari deliberately chooses a holiday or Sunday to do its prowling, so that the hunter who hunts on those days is risking death.[24]

Single eye

Cascudo noted that like the ogre of Europe, the Labatut,[25] the Mapinguari, and the Capelobo of Brazilian lore were all ascribed a single eye.Template:SfnpTemplate:RefnTemplate:Refn

Some additional ethnography from other tribal peoples attest to the Mapinguari being described as single-eyed,[26] like a cyclops,[27]Template:Sfnp[18] as follows:

The woodsmen of Amazonas have known of the Mapnguari as a hairy man, sometimes with an eye on the belly, sometimes a single eye on the forehead like a cyclops, according to Template:Interlanguage link (1977).[27]

A collective narrative tale describes a hunter who lives in the Amazon near Tefé, Amazonas who went out to hunt on a Sunday against advise, and encountered a Mapinguari which was like a hairy black ape, with a single green eye. It also had a shell like a turtle's.[23]

As another example, the lore among the present-day Mura people is that the Mapinguari has a single eye on its head and a mouth on its belly, according to the gloss given by indigenous writer Márcia Nunes Maciel (aka Márcia Mura).[28]

Fauna identification

Template:Interlanguage link (1977) conjectured that the Amazon natives were reporting on their fears for the Amazonian bear or spectacled bear, known in Quechua as the Script error: No such module "Lang". ("bear that hugs").[27]

Cascudo (1962) commented there was close similarity between the Mapinguari and the Mongolian "wild man" or Template:Transliteration.Template:Refn[12] This creature is otherwise designated by its Russian name Almas,[29] and discussed (as cryptid) by Ivan T. Sanderson's Abominable Snowmen (1961).Template:SfnpTemplate:Refn

Cryptozoology and paleontology

Bernard Heuvelmans (1958) and other cryptozoologists also speculated that the mapinguari might be an unknown primate, akin to Bigfoot.[18]Template:Refn

Then David C. Oren in a 1993 paper, suggested it might be a modern-day sighting of a giant ground sloth, an animal estimated to have gone extinct at the end of the Late Pleistocene.[7]Template:Sfnp

Oren, an ornithologist, who during his research (1970s–1990s in the Tapajós River basin) heard stories about recent huntings of this creature (including anecdotes that some hunters kept the hair and claws but were discarded due to the stench), and hypothesized they might be the extinct ground sloths. One of Oren's arguments was that some ground sloths had bony plates like protective armor (cf. mylodontid pelt below), which coincided with the lore that the mapinguari was invulnerable to projectile weapons on most parts of its body. Oren's conjecture was met by criticism by scientists at the time, but an article Oren's 1993 announcement was picked up by major news papers despite no evidence.[18]

Ethnologist Gerard H. Shepard (2002), focused not on the segamai of the Machiguenga (syn. mapinguari) but rather the oshetoniro ("mother of spider monkeys") as a likely variant of the Mapinguari lore, which might be folkloric memory of a ground sloth.[8][9] Manuel Lizarralde (2002) writing in the same essay collection compares his findings on the legendary red-colored "giant monkey" shaarobaTemplate:Refn of the Barí people to Shepard's creature insofar as it may also be the memory of a living ground sloth encounter in the remote past.Template:Refn[30]

Long before Oren, Florentino Ameghino (1898) claimed the ground sloth was still living in South America.[31] He obtained a samples of scales from a pelt he considered fresh, and he published his opinion that ground sloth were recently alive, fortified by the testimony of a trained geologist about witnessing a pangolin-like creature in Patagonia (Santa Cruz Province, Argentina).[32] But the identical pelt sample bearing osteoderms from a mylodontid ground slothTemplate:Efn has recently dated to 13,200 years ago, in the late Pleistocene.[33] The investigation was conducted by the team of Néstor Toledo.Template:RefnTemplate:Refn

Skeptical geobiologist Paul S. Martin has also argued against any credible possibility of such survival (in the face of encroachment by mankind), pointing out that there have not been any ground sloth remains found in any of the modern (Holocene) fossil records spanning many thousands of years.[34] While the youngest dated ground sloth fossil found on the South American mainland is from Brazil, from 13,000 BP (Pleistocene), the ground sloth did survive much later into the Holocene in the Caribbean, to anywhere from 5,600 to 2,500 years ago based on radiocarbon dating.[35]Template:Refn

A 2021 published study headed by paleontologist Julia Tejada (now at Caltech[36]) indicates that the ground sloth was not a strict herbivore as had been assumed, but was an omnivorous creature.[37]

A 2023 academic study of the 1995 discovery of giant sloth bones “modified into primordial pendants”suggested that humans lived in the Americas contemporaneously with the giant sloth, though these artefacts date back to 25,000 and 27,000 years of age. The reporter comments that though the ground sloth went extinct 11,000 BP (or BC),Template:Efn their fossils are plentifully to be found, so they may very well have "served as inspiration for the Mapinguari, a mythical beast that, in Amazonian legend, had the nasty habit of twisting off the heads of humans and devouring them".[38]

In popular culture

A reference to Mapinguari occurs in the 2020 animated film The Red Scroll, during the final scene when the character Wupa transforms into a giant sloth monster.[39]

See also

Explanatory notes

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References

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Bibliography

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External links

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  3. Vocabulario s.v. Script error: No such module "URL".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". "Script error: No such module "Lang"."
  4. Cascudo (2002), p. 223 cited by Template:Harvp, n 5.
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  6. a b c Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named demello2024
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  13. a b c d e Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named magalhaes&silva_campos1928
  14. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named cascudo1962-Gorjala
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  19. Template:Harvp: "Quibungo, Negro africano, quando fica muito velho, vira Quibungo. É um macacão todo peludo, que come crianças. (Recôncavo da Bahia)" citing da Silva Campos, João (1928) “Contos e Fábulas populares da Bahia”, in O Folclore no Brasil, p. 219
  20. Template:Harvp: "Uma característica do Quibungo é sua bocarra aberta verticalmente da garganta ao estômago"
  21. Template:Harvp: "Do africano Quibungo, o Mapinguari tem a posição anômala da boca"
  22. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named souza_carneiro1937
  23. a b c Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named galeano2014
  24. Template:Harvp: "Caçador que encontrar matando caça nesses dias proibidos e de preceito é homem morto"; Template:Harvp [1976], p. 191; Cascudo (2002), p. 223 apud Template:Harvp
  25. Template:Harvp: Labatut is an imaginary being in the folklore of the mountainous Chapada do Apodi region in the state of Rio Grande do Norte and parts of the adjoining state of Ceará
  26. Cf. infra
  27. a b c Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named monteiro1977
  28. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named nunes_maciel2023
  29. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named rincen1964
  30. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named lizarralde2002
  31. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named holloway1999
  32. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named ameghino1898
  33. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named benialgo2020
  34. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named martin2005
  35. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named mcDonald2014
  36. Dajose, Lori (Fall 2024,) "Script error: No such module "URL".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Caltech Magazine, pp. 16–17 (14–20).
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  38. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". reprinted as "Script error: No such module "URL".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters"." in The Seattle Times, 23 July 2023
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