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Perhaps as long as 5,000 years ago, a group of sailors found skulls belonging to a race of hideous giants whom the ancient Greeks named cyclops. Dwelling in their mythical land, entrusting the fate of their crops to their evil gods and devouring any humans they could find, these creatures... more
Reviewed by yobaba Jun 13 2008, 03:43pm ( 49 reviews ) • strangescience.net
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Rated by annajyu on Oct 07, 4:59pm
great
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Rated by DavidJohns on Aug 06, 11:38pm
Dwelling in their mythical land, entrusting the fate of their crops to their evil gods and devouring any humans they could find, these creatures terrified generations of Europeans.
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Rated by shade11 on Jun 29, 5:10am
It'd be nice if i didn't stumble into complete shit. I actually looked into this, most is complete bollocks. Cite please.
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Rated by raza9800 on Jun 24, 12:25pm
this a very nice arts to old pic.............
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Rated by Flips99 on Feb 23 2009, 1:36pm
"Over the centuries, our understanding of mammals, both living and extinct, has improved considerably. Just the same, scientists have made some mistakes." The other sections of this site are also worth a look.
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Rated by Radiosucks on Feb 17 2009, 9:13am
FP:Perhaps as long as 5,000 years ago, a group of sailors found skulls belonging to a race of hideous giants whom the ancient Greeks named cyclops. Dwelling in their mythical land, entrusting the fate of their crops to their evil gods and devouring any humans they could find, these creatures terrified generations of Europeans. Today, relatives of these monsters can still be found -- roaming the African savannas or the Indian jungles, or even eating peanuts from the hands of small children in city zoos. In fact, the ancient Greek sailors found elephant skulls. What they mistook for single eye sockets were the nasal openings for the elephants' trunks. Over the centuries, our understanding of mammals, both living and extinct, has improved considerably. Just the same, scientists have made some mistakes.
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Rated by zosimee on Dec 10 2008, 2:51pm
From the page: "Perhaps as long as 5,000 years ago, a group of sailors found skulls belonging to a race of hideous giants whom the ancient Greeks named cyclops. Dwelling in their mythical land, entrusting the fate of their crops to their evil gods and devouring any humans they could find, these creatures terrified generations of Europeans."