You Won’t Believe What the DNA Of This Women Reveals

You Won’t Believe What the DNA Of This Women Reveals

“They [Fallen Angels] began to sin [have sex] against birds, and beasts, and reptiles, and 
fish, and to devour one another’s flesh, and drink the blood.” The Book of Enoch 

When these fallen angels had sex with animals it produced a wide variety of hybrid 
creatures 
that we only hear about in fairytales: Bigfoot’s, lizard beings, satyr, etc. 

If such creatures do indeed exist then the Book of Enoch certainly has an answer as 
to why they are here. One creature in particular, Bigfoot, has gotten so much publicity 
that movies and entire tv series have been devoted to their cause. Over the years 
tens-of-thousands of sightings have surfaced claiming they saw Bigfoot yet no one 
has been able to come up with any solid evidence such as a physical body or a lab 
test result…. that is, until now!

According to a Professor at the University of Oxford, a woman by the name of Zana 
just might be that missing DNA link that they are looking for. DABOO77 Brings us 
the latest…

 
 
 

Trapped: A merchant found Zana in the Ochamchir region of western Georgia and after hunters caught her, they placed her in a ditch surrounded by sharp spikes.


Tales of feral children - children who were raised in the wild by animals - are well known. But the story of Zana is perhaps the most perplexing case on record.

In 1850, a group of hunters were prowling the Ochamchir region of Georgia in Russia when they were astonished by the sight of a young female wild woman. She looked somewhat human, but also had many ape-like features. With great difficulty, they captured the woman and brought her to civilization for study where they named her Zana.

Although she was clearly not an ape, Zana didn't look quite human either. Unlike other feral captures, which were obviously human in appearance, she had thick arms, legs and fingers, a massive bosom and was covered with dark hair. More primitive still was her behavior, which was so vicious that she had to be kept caged for the first few years of her captivity.

The details of her life in the Russian village are sketchy, but apparently Zana's behavior mellowed after a few years and she was taught to perform such domestic tasks as grinding corn. It was said that she had a remarkable tolerance for the cold and disliked being in a heated room.

Although Zana never learned to communicate through human speech, she obviously had developed social abilities since she gave birth to several children sired by various human fathers. How these pregnancies came about exactly is unclear, but it is known that Zana accidentally killed at least one of her children by trying to bathe it in a cold river. Apparently, she thought her offspring had the same tolerance to cold as she did.

Several of her other children were taken from her, for their protection, by families in the village who raised them as their own. Unlike their mother, the children did learn to speak and they eventually had children of their own. Zana died in 1890, and the youngest of her children survived until 1954. Her grandchildren, according to researchers, had dark skin, Negroid features and were extraordinarily strong.

What was Zana? Professor Boris Porchnev of the Moscow Academy of Sciences believed Zana might have been an Alma. An Alma is an elusive creature of Central Asia that is somewhat akin to our own Sasquatch, but with an important difference. Almas are said to be much more humanlike than the common descriptions of Sasquatch. And Porchnev theorized that they might be a surviving clan of Neanderthals!

It has been recently speculated that Neanderthals could and did breed with homo sapiens in the distant past. And, just perhaps, not so long ago. Zana certainly fits the description.

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