This is a being that has traveled a lot: In August 2006 we received the phographs shown above with messages from campeches (Mexico), Veda (South Africa), Cebu (Philippines) and Swasiland, in which they were claimed to show a mermaid (or a galvice or extraterrestrial).
The correct answer here, however, is “part of the above”: it is pictures of a model created by the artist Juan Cabana that was offered for sale in a street campaign (others are available) and with a detailed background story, which deals with how the seller had discovered the “Mermaid or the Sea Former” when he “explored lonely areas of Fort Desoto Beach at the southern Spitze of St. Petersburg, Florida, Florida.
(The same seller offered other articles with an equally doubtful reputation, such as a “Time Traveler UFO Organic Corpse αuthentic αlien Corpse” (other) that a gray carvings that I had just bought from another eBay seller.)
Creatures (half -human, half, half fish who live in the sea, both male “mermaids” and female “sirens”) have been an integral part of folklore and mythology for many centuries.
Although the modern, popular image of Sermalists is almost exclusively limited to the depiction of attractive, man -shher women with upper body and fish -like cocks (such as Arielle, the heroine of Disney’s popular film adaptation of “Arielle, the mermaid” (a children’s fairy tale of Haps Christia (Adderse) from 1836) from 1989), this picture was not always standard.
The representation of mermaids as hideous, tiny creatures and the use of body parts of other animals (mainly monkeys and fishing) for the production of copies of such creatures are very, very old. This proves an allegedly mummified mermaid, who was exhibited in Japan several centuries ago and is probably up to 1,400 years old.
The mysterious Dr. Griffi was actually a fictional figure, played by Levi Lyma, an employee of the famous American show map and trading traveler PT. This being has traveled a lot: In August 2006 we received the phographs shown above with messages in which it was claimed that they showed a mermaid (or a naval galvice or an extraterrestrial) from Campeche (Mexico), Veda (South Africa), Cebu (Philippines) and Swasiland.
The correct answer here, however, is “part of the above”: it is pictures of a model created by the artist Juan Cabana that was offered for sale in a street campaign (others are available) and with a detailed background story, which deals with how the seller had discovered the “Mermaid or the Sea Former” when he “explored lonely areas of Fort Desoto Beach at the southern Spitze of St. Petersburg, Florida, Florida.
(The same seller offered other articles with an equally doubtful reputation, such as a “Time Traveler UFO Organic Corpse αuthentic αlien Corpse” (other) that a gray carvings that I had just bought from another eBay seller.)
Creatures (half -human, half, half fish who live in the sea, both male “mermaids” and female “sirens”) have been an integral part of folklore and mythology for many centuries.
Although the modern, popular image of Sermalists is almost exclusively limited to the depiction of attractive, man -shher women with upper body and fish -like cocks (such as Arielle, the heroine of Disney’s popular film adaptation of “Arielle, the mermaid” (a children’s fairy tale of Haps Christia (Adderse) from 1836) from 1989), this picture was not always standard.
The representation of mermaids as hideous, tiny creatures and the use of body parts of other animals (mainly monkeys and fishing) for the production of copies of such creatures are very, very old. This proves an allegedly mummified mermaid, who was exhibited in Japan several centuries ago and is probably up to 1,400 years old.
The mysterious Dr. Griffi was actually a fictional figure played by Levi Lyma, a colleague of the famous American showman and trading traveler PT.
Barnum exhibited the “cautious” creature in the entire United States and opened his American Museum based in New York for a few decades before it was lost in a museum fire in 1865. The “mermaid” was actually only reconstructed from paper mache, fish parts, the body of an orangutan baby and a monkey head.
Barnum exhibited the “cautious” creature in the entire United States and opened his American Museum based in New York for a few decades before it was lost in a museum fire in 1865. The “mermaid” was actually only reconstructed from paper mache, fish parts, the body of an orangutan baby and a monkey head.