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  • [[Category:Sea and lake monsters]]
    2 KB (359 words) - 11:55, 26 April 2009
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    2 KB (320 words) - 22:18, 19 November 2008
  • ...are transported to the Lake of the Dead. The koko occasionally leave their lake village and visit humans in the form of clouds. ...in the underworld, but their children's spirits are transformed into water monsters, or uwanammi, who have the power to bring rain.
    6 KB (979 words) - 08:29, 11 June 2010
  • ...he boundary fortresses of Kazan, Alabuga and Cükätaw, legends about flying monsters flourished. One particular fortress on the Shishma River was known as Yilan ...s transformed into Diü, a spirit who founded the underwater kingdom of the lake.
    5 KB (895 words) - 00:49, 15 March 2009
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    1 KB (228 words) - 18:52, 11 February 2012
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]] [[Category:Bipedal monsters]]
    4 KB (563 words) - 23:10, 19 November 2008
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    2 KB (341 words) - 19:11, 17 September 2008
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    2 KB (423 words) - 14:46, 12 April 2009
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    3 KB (453 words) - 14:59, 11 December 2007
  • ...e Republic of the Congo, and possibly Cameroon. It is also said to inhabit Lake Bangweulu in Zambia. They are thought not to live in herds or groups, but t ...n, along the shores of the Luapula River, which connects Lake Bangweulu to Lake Mweru.
    6 KB (918 words) - 15:47, 16 February 2008
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    3 KB (456 words) - 20:30, 25 January 2009
  • [[Category:Sea and lake monsters]]
    3 KB (410 words) - 18:36, 18 April 2007
  • ...their ancestors had trapped the Buru in five deep pools in the bottom of a lake, and that the creatures were stoned to death and the pools filled in. By th ...River monster. More importantly, Charles Gould in Appendix VII to Mythical Monsters describes what is supposedly a Chinese dragon going under the name of Kiao-
    4 KB (649 words) - 22:17, 9 September 2008
  • ...s/carcass/index.php?detail=article&idarticle=61 Trunko article on American Monsters] [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    4 KB (628 words) - 21:17, 17 September 2008
  • ...Hall saw a Dog-faced Bunyip with jet-black hair in the marsh running into Lake Bathurst South, New South Wales. ...with a head like a bulldog and black shaggy fur. While rowing across Great Lake, Tasmania, Charles Headlam and a friend almost bumped into a Dog-faced Buny
    9 KB (1,575 words) - 19:12, 11 July 2007
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    3 KB (448 words) - 21:21, 30 August 2010
  • [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    3 KB (446 words) - 20:43, 5 June 2008
  • Bakunawa appears as a giant sea serpent with a mouth the size of a lake, a red tongue, whiskers, gills, small wires at its sides, and two sets of w [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    5 KB (993 words) - 09:25, 29 September 2010
  • ...ember of 1980, Larry Gwin spotted what he thought was Altamaha-ha in Smith Lake, located up the Altamaha River, while eel fishing. He described the creatur [[Category: Sea and lake monsters]]
    5 KB (916 words) - 21:57, 22 November 2010
  • The older brother had other monsters to slay, and he left Mokwayo to seek his own way. Left to his own devices, ...he went far away and built his wigwam on the northeastern shore of a large lake, where he took up his abode.
    4 KB (725 words) - 17:59, 9 May 2022

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