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| | cain_devera: A Historie of Foure Footed Beastes, Part. 1 |
 | | Nikolay Muravyov, in his memoirs, wrote that as governor of Siberia, he received occasional reports of cacarphane sightings, and some trappers even attempted to sell pelts of the predator, short-furred, stiff, too inflexible, and prone to rotting away even when properly cured. |
 | | Bronislaw Piotr Pilsudski, a Polish scientist exiled to Sakhalin Island in the late 1890's by the Tsarist government, reputedly observed carcaphanes at close proximity, but as he drown in the Seine in 1918, the report was never compiled, and all his papers were lost. |
 | | The only definite evidence of a, regrettably slain, cacarphane was reported in early 1904, when one Captain Feodor Kruzych shot and killed one in northern Manchuria. |
| cain-devera.livejournal.com /5383.html (791 words) |
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