The Boggy Creek Monster

 

The Boggy Creek, also known as the Fouke Monster or Southern Sasquatch, is a large brown humanoid near Fouke, Arkansas, and bears a strikingly eerie similar to the Momo seen in Louisiana, Missouri.

It has received a lot of attention, and tracks have been discovered. It is pretty ferocious and preys on humans. The beast has horrified a lot of people. Local legends of an apelike creature date back to 1946, when it was dubbed the Jonesville Monster (after the town where it was first spotted). Although it was spotted again in the mid-1960s, the creature didn't make local headlines until 1971, when it was said to have attacked Bobby and Elizabeth Ford's home.

The Fouke Monster was the subject of the 1972 documentary film "The Legend of Boggy Creek," directed by Charles B. Pierce, leading to more sightings in the late 1990s. Between 1972 and 2011, four other films featuring the Boggy Creek Monster were released.


The Southern Sasquatch is a giant, humanoid ape with long arms, dark hair, three toes on each foot, and silver dollar-sized eyes. It's reported to walk with a shuffling pace and run like an ape, bent or slouched and swinging its arms. The creature was 7 feet tall, weighing up to 300 pounds, and had a chest around 3 feet wide in original reports from the 1970s. The reported footprints of the creature are 17 inches long and 7 inches wide.

The Swamp Monster's claimed footprints had questioned the creature's veracity for many doubters and academics. The prints, which have three toes, are entirely different from any known primates' five-toed foot.

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