Near Dhading, Nepal, is supposed to live a population of mixed human-yeti descent. According to the story, in 1917 a boy was captured by a female yeti and these are their descendants.
The Indlovu clan of the Zulus, whence sprang their greatest chiefs, claim descent from a female human who mated with an elephant. The story starts with a rather plump Zulu woman who met a friendly and courteous elephant. I rather suspect that the story evolved from the name of the clan, rather than vice versa.
In the Mongolian monastery of Lamyn Hegen, there had been a very learned and intelligent lama known as "Son of the Almas". His father had been captured by some almas and fathered a child on one of them. When he escaped from the group, he took the child with him. The information came from an old Mongolian named Gendun, whose father had been a contemporary of the lama in question. (O. Tchernine The Yeti London, 1997)
A woman in China claimed she had been kidnapped by a wildman which had made her pregnant. A video of the supposed hybrid, now grown up, showed a male with a small head and caudal appendage. He could not speak. (Taiwan World Journal, October 11th, 1997).
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