![]() After eating hundreds of eyes, his own eyes became filled with a furious fire, which he can now use to set fire to forests and fields. According to Brazilian folklore, the Boitata was a cave-dwelling anaconda who developed an appetite for eating the eyes of his prey. Yacumama is also referred to as “the mother of the water” and is believed to have given life to all the animals in the sea.īoitata is a river-serpent with fiery powers. Yacumama is a Goddess who takes the form of a giant sea-serpent, believed by the indigenous people of Peru, Ecuador, and Argentina to inhabit the mouth of the Amazon River. ![]() Both snakes were constrictors, like the Giant Anaconda.īeyond the fossil record, South American folklore is populated with numerous anaconda-esque monsters. Gigantophis, who held the title of the world’s largest snake before remains of Titanoboa were unearthed, lived in the Middle East and was capable of growing to 36 feet (11 meters) or more. This prehistoric, Columbian monster is estimated to have reached lengths of 42 feet (13 meters) or more. Titanoboa is the largest snake species the world has seen. Related CreaturesĪlthough Giant Anacondas probably don’t slither the Earth today, the ancestors of today’s anacondas did reach giant proportions. Giant Anacondas are often depicted as guardians as well, sometimes barring the way to a hidden treasure, sometimes acting as protectors of nature itself. By some accounts, they might have breath so terrible or a gaze so fearsome that it can paralyze their prey before they attack.Īccording to native South American legends, Giant Anacondas may be shape-shifters that spend part of their lives in human form. They first attack their prey, pinning it between the inward-curving teeth of their massive jaws, then wrap coil upon mighty coil around their prey and squeeze until the heart stops beating. Giant Anacondas are constrictors, just like their smaller relatives. Crocodiles, jaguars, humans, and boats are said to be common prey, and the etymology of the word anaconda (which means “having killed an elephant” in Tamil) suggests that Giant Anacondas might be capable of tackling even larger prey. Giant Anacondas are often spotted right after they’ve eaten. Giants have also been reported lurking in the dense jungle vegetation of the Amazon Rainforest and in some African rainforests. Most Giant Anaconda reports come out of South America, where vast swamps and marshes allow these monsters to lie hidden under the lilies. They may be pitch black, have horns, or have large, fiery eyes. The Giant Anacondas of native legend are even more terrifying. Other explorers reported a similarly unbearable smell, usually caused by the anaconda’s breath. “a penetrating foetid odor probably its breath.” Percy Fawcett, a famous explorer who reported encountering a 62-foot anaconda in Bolivia, described the stench as Both their jaws and their skin can expand, allowing them to swallow meals of a ghastly size.Ī terrible stench is sometimes associated with Giant Anacondas. ![]() They may also have yellowish spots near their underbelly and orange bars that run from their eyes to their nightmarish jaws. Like regular anacondas, Giant Anacondas have dark green-grey skin and egg-shaped black spots. Giants top the scales at 165 feet (50 meters) long. Still, Giant Anacondas dwarf even the largest green anaconda on record. (227 kilograms) - a true gargantuan measuring a full 14 feet (4 meters) more than the average length. The largest green anaconda on record is 29 feet (8.8 meters) long and weighs 550 lbs. Pound for pound, the largest snake species in the world is the green anaconda. Giant Anacondas are quite similar to regular anacondas in fact, people who report seeing Giant Anacondas usually claim that the snake was a terrifically large specimen of the known species. The legendary serpents are often reported as being two or three times the size of the largest anaconda to be scientifically documented. The Giant Anaconda is an exaggerated version of the already monstrous anacondas living in South America.
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