Yeti footprints found by Himalayan search team

A team of Japanese adventurers say they have discovered footprints they believe were made by the legendary yeti said to roam the Himalayan regions of Nepal and Tibet.

Why is there always just one footprint? Do all these monsters travel only in giant, one-legged bounds?
Why is there always just one footprint? Do all these monsters travel only in giant, one-legged bounds?
October 21, 2008 10:53 AM

A team of Japanese adventurers say they have discovered footprints they believe were made by the legendary yeti said to roam the Himalayan regions of Nepal and Tibet.

"The footprints were about 20cm (eight inches) long and looked like a human's," Yoshiteru Takahashi, the leader of the Yeti Project Japan, told AFP in Kathmandu.

More footprints - this time a herd of dinosaurs

Despite spending 42 days on Dhaulagiri IV - a 7661m peak where they say they have seen traces of yetis in the past - the team failed in their prime objective of capturing one on film.

But Takahashi said the footprints were proof enough.

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