
If
there's nearly one thing universal in Native American mythology it is
giant birds, monster birds, even the Thunderbird (which has been adopted
as a brand name for many products not to mention the name of a TV show
with associated spin-off motion pictures). Now apart from the actual
observations of these winged monstrosities, there's nothing all that
unusual about giant flying creatures in mythology. What sets these
'birds' apart is that they often like to snack on the natives - as
takeaways, not dine in. Is there any natural terrestrial explanation for
birds carrying away humans, like a crow picking up a kernel of corn?
Or, might one have to resort to another, more unnatural and perhaps
extraterrestrial explanation?
Mythological Monster 'Birds' of the Americas
Dragons:
While primarily connected with the Old World (Europe, the Far East,
etc.), dragons have some, albeit lesser known connection in the New
World of the Americas, perhaps a bit more in the guise of serpents, that
is taking on a serpentine appearance. This is most notably so with
respect to that famous feathered serpent (sounds more like a bird
actually) Quetzalcoatl, a central Aztec deity, but noted as well in
Mayan culture and that other, and mysterious initial Mesoamerican
civilization, the Olmecs.
However, we do have the Piasa Bird which
is depicted as a dragon in a Native American Indian mural above the
Mississippi River near modern Alton, Illinois. It's thought that the
originals were done by the Cahokia Indians way before any white settlers
arrived in their territory. Their pictographs of animals, birds such as
the falcon, bird-men and serpents (monstrous snakes) were common, as
was the Thunderbird icon. According to a local professor living in the
area in the 1830's, John Russell, the Piasa Bird depicted in the mural
was a monstrous bird that inhabited the area and attacked and ate the
locals that inhabited various Indian villages in the area. Apparently it
got a taste for human flesh after scavenging human carrion (corpses).
Thunderbirds
& Related: These beasties are nearly universal in Native American
Indian mythology, and what's more they carry many similar features. They
tend to be very large birds that are seen as the personification of
thunder (the beating of their wings) and lightning and all things
stormy; a sort of Zeus or Thor but with wings, talons, a beak and
feathers. The Native Americans believed that the giant Thunderbird could
shoot lightning from its eyes. Say what? Even odder is that the
Thunderbird often has teeth in its beak. We've all heard the phrase
"rare as hen's teeth" - well that's because modern birds are toothless.
Thunderbirds
were also associated with the Great Spirits so common in Indian lore.
They were servants of these deities and apparently acted as
messenger-boys (sorry, messenger-birds) - a sort of extra-large carrier
pigeon - carrying communications between these various Great Spirits.
Thunderbirds were associated with the weather as we've seen, and also
with water. Now an interesting parallel is that dragons in the Old World
are often viewed as go-betweens between the gods and humanity (sort of
again like carrier pigeons) and their having some control over the
weather and the waters was a common feature as well.
So, this
mythological monster bird is common throughout Indian legends. Actually
in one case there was a Thunderbird that resembled a giant eagle that
was large enough, and powerful enough to carry a whale in its claws. Say
what again? According to the Makah people of the Northwest Coast, a
Thunderbird saved a village from famine by snatching up a whale from the
Pacific Ocean and giving it to the community to feed off of, giving the
village food lasting for many weeks. Would this be an American example
of a case of manna from Heaven? Now no bird could actually carry even a
small whale in its beak or talons, so there must be another explanation.
I've
previously related how the Navajos have associated Ship Rock (or
Shiprock) in New Mexico with a legend that says they were flown by a
'flying rock' (Ship Rock) provided by their Great Spirit to escape their
enemies from up north. The Navajos, in other legends, have associated
Ship Rock with the presence of 'Bird Monsters' or cliff monsters that
preyed and feed on human Navajo and Zunis flesh. I wonder if that could
be a garbled tale of UFO abduction.
Related are the tales of the
Yaqui from around the Sonora region in NW Mexico. Yaqui legends tell of
enormous birds around Skeleton Mountain that carried off men, women and
children.
There's a petroglyph at Puerco Pueblo (or village)
located in the Petrified Forest National Park of an enormous bird with a
human suspended in the air by its beak. If we assume the human is of
average height, say 5' 6" tall, then the bird, to scale, is roughly 13'
9" tall. That's one very big bird! The petroglyph was carved into stone
many, many hundreds upon hundreds of years ago by the ancestors of the
Hopis, maybe even by the lost Anasazis.

When it comes to the
Thunderbirds, scholars of mythology strongly suggest that this creature
is just the embellishment of the California condor, eagles, or the
extinct teratorns. However, to my way of thinking, one doesn't usually
associate birds with thunder and lightning (i.e. - storms). Now you may
see birds riding the thermals that might precede a storm, but you don't
tend to see birds out and about in stormy weather - they seek shelter
from the elements too. Yet many tribes like the Lakota Sioux or the
Ojibwa of the Great Lakes Region make the connection between these
Thunderbirds and lightning in particular. Perhaps the association with
something flying and thunder and lightning suggests something a bit more
technological!
I mean something that can serve as a monster
carrier pigeon between the gods, lift huge weights, abduct humans
(recorded in many Indian legends) and shoot out lightning bolts doesn't
sound like biology to me, rather more something artificial. Now perhaps
all these legends of abducting and man-eating giant birds are nothing
more than a rogue eagle or condor with too much testosterone in its
system who, feeling threatened, attacked a lone Indian and like the fish
that got away, the bird just grew and got embellished, and grew some
more and got even more embellished until it reached ridiculous
proportions and abilities. Well maybe.
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