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While my internet was out I made a colorized version of the original picture. |
Bunyip
- The bunyip, or kianpraty, is a large mythical creature from
Aboriginal mythology, said to lurk in swamps, billabongs, creeks,
riverbeds, and waterholes. The origin of the word bunyip has been traced
to the Wemba-Wemba or Wergaia language of Aboriginal people of
South-Eastern Australia. However, the bunyip appears to have formed part
of traditional Aboriginal beliefs and stories throughout
Australia, although its name varied according to tribal nomenclature.
In his 2001 book, writer Robert Holden identified at least nine regional
variations for the creature known as the bunyip across Aboriginal
Australia. Various written accounts of bunyips were made by Europeans in
the early and mid-19th century, as settlement spread across the
country.
The word bunyip is usually translated by Aboriginal
Australians today as "devil" or "evil spirit". However, this translation
may not accurately represent the role of the bunyip in Aboriginal
mythology or its possible origins before written accounts were made.
Some modern sources allude to a linguistic connection between the bunyip
and Bunjil, "a mythic 'Great Man' who made the mountains and rivers and
man and all the animals." The word bunyip may not have appeared in
print in English until the mid-1840s.
By the 1850s, bunyip had
also become a "synonym for impostor, pretender, humbug and the like" in
the broader Australian community. The term bunyip aristocracy was first
coined in 1853 to describe Australians aspiring to be aristocrats. In
the early 1990s, it was famously used by Prime Minister Paul Keating to
describe members of the conservative Liberal Party of Australia
opposition.
The word bunyip can still be found in a number of
Australian contexts, including place names such as the Bunyip River
(which flows into Westernport Bay in southern Victoria) and the town of
Bunyip, Victoria.
Descriptions of bunyips vary widely. George French Angus may have
collected a description of a bunyip in his account of a "water spirit"
from the Moorundi people of the Murray River before 1847, stating it is
"much dreaded by them… It inhabits the Murray; but…they have some
difficulty describing it. Its most usual form…is said to be that of an
enormous starfish." Robert Brough Smyth's Aborigines of Victoria of 1878
devoted ten pages to the bunyip, but concluded "in truth little is
known among the blacks respecting its form, covering or habits; they
appear to have been in such dread of it as to have been unable to take
note of its characteristics." However, common features in many
19th-century newspaper accounts include a dog-like face, dark fur, a
horse-like tail, flippers, and walrus-like tusks or horns or a duck-like
bill.
The Challicum bunyip, an outline image of a bunyip
carved by Aborigines into the bank of Fiery Creek, near Ararat,
Victoria, was first recorded by The Australasian newspaper in 1851.
According to the report, the bunyip had been speared after killing an
Aboriginal man. Antiquarian Reynell Johns claimed that until the
mid-1850s, Aboriginal people made a "habit of visiting the place
annually and retracing the outlines of the figure [of the bunyip] which
is about 11 paces long and 4 paces in extreme breadth." The outline
image no longer exists.
Non-Aboriginal Australians have made various attempts to understand and
explain the origins of the bunyip as a physical entity over the past 150
years.
Writing in 1933, Charles Fenner suggested that it was
likely that the "actual origin of the bunyip myth lies in the fact that
from time to time seals have made their way up the ... Murray and
Darling (Rivers)". He provided examples of seals found as far inland as
Overland Corner, Loxton, and Conargo and reminded readers that "the
smooth fur, prominent 'apricot' eyes and the bellowing cry are
characteristic of the seal."
Another suggestion is that the
bunyip may be a cultural memory of extinct Australian marsupials such as
the Diprotodon, Zygomaturus, Nototherium or Palorchestes. This
connection was first formally made by Dr George Bennett of the
Australian Museum in 1871, but in the early 1990s, palaeontologist Pat
Vickers-Rich and geologist Neil Archbold also cautiously suggested that
Aboriginal legends "perhaps had stemmed from an acquaintance with
prehistoric bones or even living prehistoric animals themselves ... When
confronted with the remains of some of the now extinct Australian
marsupials, Aborigines would often identify them as the bunyip." They
also note that "legends about the mihirung paringmal of western
Victorian Aborigines …may allude to the …extinct giant birds the
Dromornithidae."
Another connection to the bunyip is the shy
Australasian bittern (Botaurus poiciloptilus). During the breeding
season, the male call of this marsh-dwelling bird is a "low pitched
boom"; hence, it is occasionally called the "bunyip bird".
During the early settlement of Australia by Europeans, the notion that
the bunyip was an actual unknown animal that awaited discovery became
common. Early European settlers, unfamiliar with the sights and sounds
of the island continent's peculiar fauna, regarded the bunyip as one
more strange Australian animal and sometimes attributed unfamiliar
animal calls or cries to it. It has also been suggested that
19th-century bunyip lore was reinforced by imported European memories,
such as that of the Irish Púca.(Puca - spirit/ghost)
A large number of bunyip
sightings occurred during the 1840s and 1850s, particularly in the
southeastern colonies of Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia,
as European settlers extended their reach. The following is not an
exhaustive list of accounts:
Hume find of 1818
One of the
earliest accounts relating to a large unknown freshwater animal was in
1818, when Hamilton Hume and James Meehan found some large bones at Lake
Bathurst in New South Wales. They did not call the animal a bunyip, but
described the remains indicating the creature as very much like a
hippopotamus or manatee. The Philosophical Society of Australasia later
offered to reimburse Hume for any costs incurred in recovering a
specimen of the unknown animal, but for various reasons, Hume did not
return to the lake.
Wellington Caves fossils, 1830
More
significant was the discovery of fossilised bones of "some quadruped
much larger than the ox or buffalo in the Wellington Caves in mid-1830
by bushman George Rankin and later by Thomas Mitchell. Sydney's Reverend
John Dunmore Lang announced the find as "convincing proof of the
deluge". However, it was British anatomist Sir Richard Owen who
identified the fossils as the gigantic marsupials Nototherium and
Diprotodon. At the same time, some settlers observed "all natives
throughout these... districts have a tradition (of) a very large animal
having at one time existed in the large creeks and rivers and by many it
is said that such animals now exist."
First written use of the word bunyip, 1845
In July 1845, The Geelong Advertiser announced the discovery of fossils
found near Geelong, under the headline "Wonderful Discovery of a new
Animal". This was a continuation of a story on 'fossil remains' from the
previous issue. The newspaper continued, "On the bone being shown to an
intelligent black (sic), he at once recognised it as belonging to the
bunyip, which he declared he had seen. On being requested to make a
drawing of it, he did so without hesitation." The account noted a story
of an Aboriginal woman being killed by a bunyip and the "most direct
evidence of all" – that of a man named Mumbowran "who showed several
deep wounds on his breast made by the claws of the animal". The account
provided this description of the creature:
"The Bunyip,
then, is represented as uniting the characteristics of a bird and of an
alligator. It has a head resembling an emu, with a long bill, at the
extremity of which is a transverse projection on each side, with
serrated edges like the bone of the stingray. Its body and legs partake
of the nature of the alligator. The hind legs are remarkably thick and
strong, and the fore legs are much longer, but still of great strength.
The extremities are furnished with long claws, but the blacks say its
usual method of killing its prey is by hugging it to death. When in the
water it swims like a frog, and when on shore it walks on its hind legs
with its head erect, in which position it measures twelve or thirteen
feet in height."
Shortly after this account appeared, it was
repeated in other Australian newspapers. However, it appears to be the
first use of the word bunyip in a written publication.
The Australian Museum's bunyip of 1847
In January 1846, a peculiar skull was taken from the banks of
Murrumbidgee River near Balranald, New South Wales. Initial reports
suggested that it was the skull of something unknown to science. The
squatter who found it remarked, "all the natives to whom it was shown
called [it] a bunyip". By July 1847, several experts, including W.S.
Macleay and Professor Owen, had identified the skull as the deformed
foetal skull of a foal or calf. At the same time, however, the so-called
bunyip skull was put on display in the Australian Museum (Sydney) for
two days. Visitors flocked to see it, and The Sydney Morning Herald said
that it prompted many people to speak out about their "bunyip
sightings". Reports of this discovery used the phrase 'Kine Pratie' as
well as Bunyip and explorer William Hovell, who examined the skull, also
called it a 'katen-pai'.
In March of that year 'a bunyip or an
immense Platibus' (Platypus) was sighted 'sunning himself on the placid
bosom of the Yarra, just opposite the Custom House' in Melbourne.
'Immediately a crowd gathered' and three men set off by boat 'to secure
the stranger' who 'disappeared' when they were 'about a yard from him'.
William Buckley's account of bunyips, 1852
Another early written account is attributed to escaped convict William
Buckley in his 1852 biography of thirty years living with the Wathaurong
people. His 1852 account records "in... Lake Moodewarri [now Lake
Modewarre] as well as in most of the others inland...is a...very
extraordinary amphibious animal, which the natives call Bunyip."
Buckley's account suggests he saw such a creature on several occasions.
He adds, "I could never see any part, except the back, which appeared to
be covered with feathers of a dusky grey colour. It seemed to be about
the size of a full grown calf... I could never learn from any of the
natives that they had seen either the head or tail." Buckley also
claimed the creature was common in the Barwon River and cites an example
he heard of an Aboriginal woman being killed by one. He emphasized the
bunyip was believed to have supernatural powers.
- Source: wikipedia -
While there appears to be a pretty good historical record of sightings. I would assume this was either a now known animal that was not know to the people seeing it at the time or it was something that is now extinct.
I was able to find possible reports of a possible bunyip sighting in 1978 or 79. It stated that a plesiosaurus type creature was seen swimming in the river near Sydney. It appears the idea of the bunyip is embraced very well in Eastern Australia. The bunyip has appeared on stamps and various other artwork pieces. It is also an attraction at a place called Murray Bridge.
The Murray Bridge Bunyip
The Murray Bridge Bunyip was built by Dennis Newell and launched in 1972. For 20 cents the bunyip emerged from below the water a gave a very loud roar. The Bunyip was given a baby about 10 years after the launch. The sound box has had many problems
during its time... at one stage vandals somehow worked out how to jam it
so it would continue to roar - often through all hours of the night.
Then the Bunyip and baby were also vandalized and part was broken off. A quieter, more friendly looking bunyip was built and his cave was revamped in 2000. The price rose to $1 for three appearances. The bunyip receives in excess of 20,000 visitors per year.
The Murray Bridge Bunyip can be found lurking in his cave today on the banks of the Murray River at Sturt Reserve Murray Bridge.
(source - Janesoceania, Murraybridge.sa.gov.au )
Thanks
~Tom~
This
post by Thomas Marcum, Thomas is the founder/leader of the
cryptozoology and paranormal research organization known as The Crypto
Crew. Over 20 years experience with research and investigation of
unexplained activity, working with video and websites. A trained wild
land firefighter and a published photographer, and poet
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