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  2. Skin-walker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skin-walker

    They might also possess living animals or people and walk around in their bodies. [5] [6] [7] Skin-walkers may be male or female. [2] Skin-walker stories told among Navajo children may be complete life and death struggles that end in either skin-walker or Navajo killing the other, or partial encounter stories that end in a stalemate. [2]

  3. Shapeshifting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shapeshifting

    1722 German woodcut of a werewolf transforming. Popular shapeshifting creatures in folklore are werewolves and vampires (mostly of European, Canadian, and Native American/early American origin), ichchhadhari naag (shape-shifting cobra) of India, shapeshifting fox spirits of East Asia such as the huli jing of China, the obake of Japan, the Navajo skin-walkers, and gods, goddesses and demons and ...

  4. Mythic humanoids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mythic_humanoids

    Skin-walker – (Navajo) Type of witch with ability to disguise themselves as an animal or turn into one. Squawkowtemus – (Abenaki) Female spirit that resides in swamps. Its cries lure people close. If it touches them, they die. Stick Indians – (Pacific Northwest) monsters who materialize from out of the roots of trees and bushes and attack ...

  5. Aswang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aswang

    Aswang is an umbrella term for various shape-shifting evil creatures in Filipino folklore, such as vampires, ghouls, witches, viscera suckers, and transforming human-beast hybrids (usually dogs, cats, pigs).

  6. Tezcatlipoca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tezcatlipoca

    Tezcatlipoca's nagual, his animal counterpart, was the jaguar. In the form of a jaguar he became the deity Tepeyollotl ("Mountainheart"). In one of the two main Aztec calendars (the Tonalpohualli ), Tezcatlipoca ruled the trecena 1 Ocelotl ("1 Jaguar"); he was also patron of the days with the name Acatl ("reed").

  7. Speciesism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speciesism

    Secularists in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, advocated for animals based their stance on utilitarian principles and evolutionary kinship, critiquing the Christian church's neglect of social justice and acceptance of suffering as divinely ordained. They sought a morality free from religious influence, initially supporting vivisection ...

  8. Do these look like pandas to you? Chinese zoo under fire for ...

    www.aol.com/news/chinese-zoo-under-fire-dyeing...

    Videos circulating on Chinese social media show the two “panda dogs” in an exhibit at Taizhou Zoo in the eastern province of Jiangsu that opened on May 1. Though the animals are patterned to ...

  9. Nagual - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagual

    The Nahuals described in the Borgia Codex, metamorphic creatures capable of changing their physical form into any other animal form or even into human forms at will. In Mesoamerican folk religion , a nagual (pronounced [na'wal]) or nahual (both from the Nahuatl word nāhualli [naˈwaːlːi] ) is a human being who has the power to shapeshift ...