A while back I saw a documentary on feral pigs in the United States.
It seems that these hogs can revert to atavistic features once dominant in their ancestors.
Over time young domesticated pigs that have gone wild revert to the skull structure, bigger size and hairiness of their recently wild ancestors.
I've been wondering for a while if these characteristics were only found in pigs.
Last night I saw a documentary about feral children, specifically on the case of John Ssebunya:
Raised Wild: The Monkey Boy of Uganda.
This was very interesting, since I suspected that such cases were mostly frauds (like the kangaroo girl of Australia), but here Dr. Mary-Ann Ochota
traveled to Uganda, and she found the people who discovered the boy living with monkeys, his various teachers, and ultimately she found the young man
himself.
The boy had run into the forest during the civil war and was found in 1992.
Although he spent his first years with humans, he had spent three years living with monkeys by the age of seven.
The monkeys fed and protected him, and fiercely tried to defend him from his discoverers.
What's really interesting is that when he was found he physically looked like a monkey!
I haven't seen the other episodes yet, but it didn't surprise me that he acted like a monkey at first (just like some feral children act like dogs),
but it was the first time I heard that human bodies can physically revert or change like this.
He had hair covering his face and body, and the villagers first regarded him as a monster.
He had to be shaved all over, although the face and body hair never returned.
The people who first found him describe this quite vividly, and Dr. Ochota simply remarked that "children's bodies" could adapt in this way.
Huh, they can?
I found this issue was never scientifically explained, and down-played in the otherwise gripping documentary.
Instead, the focus was on John's mental development.
This got me wondering about Zana, the Russian "wild woman" who was captured by villagers in what is now Abkhazia in the mid-19 century.
voices.yahoo.com...
I recall a documentary where her skull and DNA were not found to be Neanderthal, but human, although researchers agreed that she was a strange looking
lady.
In fact, despite her strange and prehistoric appearance, she had 6 children with village men.
Could it be that some hominid-like creatures were simply humans who had reverted to a more hominid state?
Were the "Almas" or Almasti and some similar creatures simply breeding populations of wild humans who had changed appearance?
Given the right age and environment, can humans become more hominid?
The case of Uganda's "monkey boy" may suggest this.
Here is a link about the program on John Ssebunya, and the first clip describes what the villagers found.
blogs.discovery.com...
edit on 11-1-2013 by halfoldman because: (no reason given)