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Chupacabra Even though some sightings
date back to the 1970s, El Chupacabra - "the goat sucker" - is primarily
a phenomenon of the 1990s, and its fame has largely been spread by the
Internet. The sightings started in earnest in 1995 with reports coming
out of Puerto Rico of a strange creature that was killing farmers'
livestock - chickens, ducks, turkeys, rabbits and, of course, goats -
sometimes hundreds of animals in one evening. The farmers, who were familiar with the killing
practices of wild dogs and other predators, claimed that the methods of
this unknown beast were different. It didn't try to eat the animals it
killed, for example; nor did it drag them away to be devoured elsewhere.
Instead, the creature killed by draining its victims of blood, usually
through small incisions. Then came the bizarre eyewitness descriptions: about the size of a chimpanzee hops about like a
kangaroo large glowing red eyes grayish skin and hairy arms long
snake-like tongue sharp fangs quills running along its spine that seem
to open and close like a fan some believe it may even have wings Toward
the end of the '90s, the sightings of Chupacabra began to spread. The
creature was blamed for animal killings in Mexico, southern Texas and
several South American countries. In May and June of 2000, a rash of
incidents took place in Chile, according to certain newspapers there. In
fact, some of the most incredible claims yet came out of those
sightings: that at least one of the creatures was caught alive by local
authorities, then handed over to official agencies of the US government. What is it? Theories abound, including: an
unknown but natural species of predator; misidentified known predators;
the result of genetic experimentation; an alien. Most serious
researchers consider Chupacabra merely folklore, perpetuated by
over-enthusiastic locals immersed in superstition or a penchant for
telling tall, exaggerated tales. Yet you can be sure that we haven't seen or
heard the last of Chupacabra.
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