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==Behavior== | ==Behavior== | ||
Jesuit priest Pedro Lozano described as such: | |||
"Towards the Patagones, a very fierce animal can be found. It is called a sú or according to others Succarath and it is usually found on the river banks. It has a hideous figure, at first sight it seems to have the face of a lion or even that of a man, because from its ears grows a beard with hair that is not too long; its body narrows towards the rear, its front end is very large; its tail is long and very hairy, and with it, it hides its pups that it places on its back. This does not prevent it from running swiftly away. It is carnivorous and is hunted by the local natives, who are interested in its fur, because, being of a cold climate; they protect themselves from the weather with it. The usual way of hunting them is to dig a deep hole which they cover with branches; the unwary beast falls into it with its brood and seeing no way out, either out of generosity or anger, tears them apart with its claws, so that they do not fall into the hands of men; roaring at the same time, to terrify its hunters, who coming close to the mouth of the pit, pierce the beast with their arrows." | "Towards the Patagones, a very fierce animal can be found. It is called a sú or according to others Succarath and it is usually found on the river banks. It has a hideous figure, at first sight it seems to have the face of a lion or even that of a man, because from its ears grows a beard with hair that is not too long; its body narrows towards the rear, its front end is very large; its tail is long and very hairy, and with it, it hides its pups that it places on its back. This does not prevent it from running swiftly away. It is carnivorous and is hunted by the local natives, who are interested in its fur, because, being of a cold climate; they protect themselves from the weather with it. The usual way of hunting them is to dig a deep hole which they cover with branches; the unwary beast falls into it with its brood and seeing no way out, either out of generosity or anger, tears them apart with its claws, so that they do not fall into the hands of men; roaring at the same time, to terrify its hunters, who coming close to the mouth of the pit, pierce the beast with their arrows." |
Revision as of 21:24, 9 December 2011
Sù, or Succarath is a ferocious beast that lives in the cold, wild country at the tip of South America (Patagonia).
Description
Half tiger and half wolf, the Sù has the head of a beautiful but malicious woman. Its tail looks like a large, flat, green palm leaf.
Behavior
Jesuit priest Pedro Lozano described as such:
"Towards the Patagones, a very fierce animal can be found. It is called a sú or according to others Succarath and it is usually found on the river banks. It has a hideous figure, at first sight it seems to have the face of a lion or even that of a man, because from its ears grows a beard with hair that is not too long; its body narrows towards the rear, its front end is very large; its tail is long and very hairy, and with it, it hides its pups that it places on its back. This does not prevent it from running swiftly away. It is carnivorous and is hunted by the local natives, who are interested in its fur, because, being of a cold climate; they protect themselves from the weather with it. The usual way of hunting them is to dig a deep hole which they cover with branches; the unwary beast falls into it with its brood and seeing no way out, either out of generosity or anger, tears them apart with its claws, so that they do not fall into the hands of men; roaring at the same time, to terrify its hunters, who coming close to the mouth of the pit, pierce the beast with their arrows."
History
The fierce beast was first evoked by André Thevet (1500-1597), French Franciscan priest who traveled to Patagonia. Ambroise Paré mentioned it in 1585, before Edward Topsell’s The Historie of Four-Footed Beastes (1607).
Later, in 1892, Argentine Paleontologist, Florentino Ameghino used the Succarath to support his theory that giant sloths (Mylodons) were still alive somewhere in Patagonia by implying that they were the same creature. However, sloths are not swift and live in the tropical regions of South America, far from the cold Patagonian steppes.
Quote
- The Sù, i. e. water, becaufe living by rivers LI
- moftwhat , is found among the Patagons.c.
- Some call it Succarath. it hath a fierce Lions
- looke, yet is bearded from the eare like a man,
- 1hort-haired, the belly Itrutting out,lank flank-
- ed , the tail large and long , as a fquirrclls.
- Tliegiantlike men there,the climate being not
- very hote, wear the skins, for which, wlien
- hunted they lay their young on their back,and
- cover them with their tail, and fo run away,but
- are taken, vvhelps, and all in pits covered with
- boughs. Being faft in, for rage, or generouf-
- nefIe they kill their whelps, and cry hideoully
- to fright the hunters; they flioot him dead with
- arrows, and flea him. Some fain that they in
- fondneffe carry their young to medows, and
- there thev dreffe onch otherwithlicrndsind of
- faire fweet flowers.
- Jonstonus, Joannes, 1603-1675 / A description of the nature of four-footed beasts : with their figures :engraven in brass (1678). Chapter IV. Of the stinking beast, the graffa, and caoch, p. 112.