There is no evidence to support the existence of such beings.
Publication: archaeology
Snopes→ Has a 2,000 Year Old Roman City Been Uncovered in Spain?
Archaeologists say they’ve found “buildings of monumental proportions.”
Logically→ An image shows a 12 feet long Shiva Linga discovered at the Gyanvapi mosque in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh.
This image of the Shiva Linga is from the Cham Temple Complex in Vietnam, not from the Gyanvapi mosque.
Logically→ The megalodon was spotted off the coast of South Africa in 1942.
A doctored image purporting to show a gigantic shark is false. Scientists have found no evidence that the prehistoric shark is still in existence.
Logically→ Scientists are working on bringing back the woolly mammoth by using DNA technology.
The proposal is to gene splice bits of the extinct mammoth specimen's DNA into that of an Asian elephant to create a hybrid named a "mammophant."
Snopes→ 2,700-Year-Old Toilet Found in Jerusalem Was a Rare Luxury
The smooth, carved limestone toilet was found in a rectangular cabin that was part of a sprawling mansion overlooking what is now the Old City.
Truth or Fiction?→ McDonald’s and the Roman Road
In late August 2021, the following post about a McDonald’s restaurant incorporating an archaeological discovery into its floor appeared on the Reddit sub r/interestingasfuck and r/damnthatsinteresting: A Roman Road was discovered while
Truth or Fiction?→ ‘Zabol Priestess with a Golden Eye’
An August 4 2021 retweet imploring archeologists not to remove a golden eye from an unusually tall woman’s skeleton found in Zabol, Iran circulated across platforms, an allusion of sorts to the “2020 bingo” meme: Do. Not. Remove. T
Logically→ The skeleton of a giant who died battling a large serpent was found in Krabi, Thailand, in 2017.
Images of a Taiwanese art installation that looked like fossils of a giant and a snake have been falsely shared as being from Thailand.