Inuit mythology creatures

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an image of some type of creature with text on it that reads, akhlut a gigantic wolf - orca hybrid from inuti mythology

In Inuit mythology, Akhlut (Pronounced Ock-lut or Ack-lut) is a spirit that takes the form of both a wolf and an orca. It is a vicious, dangerous beast. Its tracks can be recognized because they are wolf tracks that lead to and from the ocean. Little is known of this spirit, other than that it shapeshifts from an orca to a wolf when hungry. Not many myths relate to this creature but it's normally portrayed as a orca/wolf.

a creepy looking creature standing in the snow

Qalupalik is an Inuit mythological creature. It is a human-like creature that lives in the sea, with long hair, green skin, and long fingernails. The myth is that qalupaliks wear an amautiit (a form of pouch that Inuit parents wear to carry their children) so they can take babies and children away who disobey their parents.

A stunning illustration of the Arctic Red-Eyed Giant—a massive, pale-furred creature standing silently in a snowy tundra under a frosty, starry sky, with blood-red eyes gleaming in the cold.

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an image of a man sitting in the middle of a group of animals and cats

We acquire new sciences - and lose old instincts. We’ve lost our aboriginal powers. From Part 3., Spirituality, of Robert S. Hare’s new ebook, AWAY WITH THIS INVERTED WORLD. Click to read a free sample: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/353068?ref=RobertHare

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