TIL that in the work, An Instinct for Dragons, an anthropologist argues that the universality of dragons across human societies is due to evolutionary reasons, with common primate predators being merged into a hybrid monster.
TIL that in the work, An Instinct for Dragons, an anthropologist argues that the universality of dragons across human societies is due to evolutionary reasons, with common primate predators being merged into a hybrid monster.
Does he offer an explanation on why dragons are winged in plenty myths?EDIT: raptors, illiterate me. Raptors.TL;DR- dragons are what happen when you mash together big cats, big snakes, and big birds of prey
Got it - thanks. My sight simply skipped past the “raptors” part.
[Thanks also @randomsnark@lemmy.ml ]
The linked article mentions that one of the predator types merged into the dragon is raptors (as in birds of prey, not velociraptors)
They’re big and scary enough today, and in the past they were even bigger and scarier.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haast's_eagle
For context, Haast’s eagle was about twice the size of today’s Harpy eagle, which itself looks like it came out of a nightmare. See photos at https://www.demilked.com/giant-bird-harpy-eagle/
It was endemic to New Zealand, which was first inhabitated much too late for this bird to become the common trope that dragons have been in many cultures.