thumb|right|[[De Loys's ape]]

The Mono Grande (Spanish for "Large Monkey"), a large monkey-like creature, has been occasionally reported in South America. Such creatures are reported as being much larger than the commonly accepted New World monkeys. These accounts have received rather little publicity, and typically generated little or no interest from experts.

Older reports and sightings

The German naturalist Alexander von Humboldt, who travelled in South America during early 19th century, heard stories from Orinoco about furry human-like creatures called Salvaje ("Wild"), which were rumoured to capture women, build huts and to occasionally eat human flesh. He attached no belief to the myth. The naturalist Philip Gosse also tried to examine these legends during his travels in Venezuela during the mid-19th century, but with no real success ().

Modern reports and sightings

The so-called De Loys's ape was photographed by Swiss geologist Francois de Loys in 1920 and proposed as a possible unknown great ape of South America; it has since been identified as almost certainly a spider monkey, after being first debunked by Sir Arthur Keith (1929).

In the 1940s, American scientist Philip Herschkowitz traveled in the same areas as de Loys, and concluded that the story was a myth whose origin was the spider monkey, Ateles belzebuth.

Sources

  • Rolf Blomberg, "Rio Amazonas", Almqvist&Wiksell, 1966.
  • Michael Shoemaker, "The Mystery of Mono Grande", Strange Magazine, April 1991.
  • Sjögren, Bengt, "Farliga djur och djur som inte finns", 1962
  • Sjögren, Bengt, Berömda vidunder, Settern, 1980,
  • Pino Turolla, "Beyond The Andes", Harper & Row, 1980.