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Is there a snow monster in the world?
The existence of snow monsters is possible, but no experts have confirmed this result.

According to legend, snow monsters haunt the Himalayas in Nepal. Since hearing this news, expeditions, scientists and media from all over the world have collectively traveled to the Himalayas, hoping to unveil the mystery of the snowman. Some scientists hope to prove the veil of this mysterious creature through DNA comparison, but others think that the snow monster may be just a rare bear.

According to Taiwan Province Province, every once in a while, people will say that they have seen snow monsters, from the Himalayas in Nepal to Alaska in the United States, and even the no-man's land in the former Soviet Union. The mysterious snowman phenomenon has attracted many scientific expeditions to places with snowmen, trying to find something.

It is said that in the Himalayas of Nepal, someone saw a snow monster 3.5 meters high. It is very powerful. It is as strong as a bear walking in the forest and snow. It walks upright on weekdays, but it can run very fast when attacked.

Indians who once lived at the foot of the Himalayas claimed that they saw the legendary snow monster and found its hair. After careful comparison by scientists, it is not the hair of known animals found, and there is no matching hair at all, which greatly improves the authenticity of mysterious creatures.

The true identity of the snowman is still in doubt:

Around 20 13 10 year128 October, a British scientist analyzed a sample that was thought to be snowman hair and found that it was closely related to an ancient polar bear. Scientists say this polar bear may live to modern times. However, other scientists said that these results should be published in peer-reviewed academic journals before discussing whether the conclusions are credible.

Brian Sykes is a senior geneticist at Oxford University in England. He published the results of a one-year research project in 20 13 10. The project strictly tested the hair and tissue samples of the legendary snowman. Sikes said: "I started collecting the hair of snowman, bigfoot and savage from 20 12, and people all over the world gave me a warm response."

The samples Sikes received included the hair of some snowman mummies from Ladakh, northern India, which was allegedly collected by a French mountaineer 40 years ago. There is also a hair found ten years ago, collected in Bhutan (about 1290 km from Ladakh).

Sykes said that the DNA test results of these two samples showed that they were very consistent with the genetic markers of the mandible of a polar bear found in the Norwegian Arctic in 2004. Scientists say this jawbone has a history of 6.5438+200,000 years.

Sykes' discovery has become the focus of the next issue of the documentary series "Bigfoot Document" broadcast by British Channel 4.