A video showing a boar being torn in half by a remarkably strong creature has surfaced on the Australian section of TikTok.
Large footprints were discovered next to the wild boar’s remains on the sand, resembling the footprints of a very large hominid.
The video was reportedly shot in a rural area in North Queensland, Australia. A group of workers accidentally stumbled upon huge human footprints in the sandy soil and decided to follow them, which eventually led them to the discovery of the two halves of a deceased boar.
The animal was not cut, but looked as if it had been torn in half down the middle. It is worth noting that in Australia there have been no known predators capable of such an act for quite some time. Even wild dingoes are not capable of this level of strength.
Journalists have learned that this video was recorded several years ago, but received little attention at the time. However, it has recently been re-uploaded to the Internet and is starting to gain popularity again.
“He tore it in half and left this next to it,” the man says in the video, showing the remains of a boar and huge prints. He placed his foot in a shoe next to one print and it is clear that the print is almost twice the size of this foot.
“He went up the hill,” says the author of the video, which shows the direction the huge footprints go. It seems the trail of tracks in the bush has disappeared.
The workers also stated that they felt very uncomfortable in this place, as if someone was watching them. When this video came to the attention of Australian Yeti researcher Dean Harrison, he stated that the prints in the sand clearly belonged to a relict hominid, that is, the Bigfoot (in Australia, by the way, the local analogue of the Bigfoot is called yay ).
“These footprints are perfectly positioned, just like other relict hominid tracks,” Harrison said, adding that the workers’ reactions to the video seemed plausible to him.
Dean Harrison has been head of the Yowie Research Center for many years and says he has received more than 1,000 reports of Yowie sightings from every state in Australia. Moreover, he cited the cases from New South Wales and Queensland as the most compelling.