The horror of the Mongolian desert - olgoy-khorkhoy (5 photos). The horror of the Mongolian desert is a giant worm! The disappearance of the American research team

by Notes of the Wild Mistress

The hero of Mongolian folklore - a giant worm - lives in the desert sandy regions of the Gobi. In its appearance, it most of all resembles the insides of an animal. On his body it is impossible to distinguish neither the head nor the eyes. The Mongols call him olgoi-khorkha, and more than anything else they are afraid of meeting him. Not a single scientist in the world has had a chance to see with his own eyes the mysterious inhabitant of the Mongolian deserts. And therefore, for many years, the olgoi-khorkhoy was considered an exclusively folklore character - a fictional monster.

However, at the beginning of the 20th century, researchers drew attention to the fact that legends about the Olgoi-Khorkhoi are told everywhere in Mongolia, and in the most diverse and remote corners of the country, legends about a giant worm are repeated word for word and abound in the same details. And so scientists decided that the basis of ancient legends is true. It may very well be that a strange creature unknown to science lives in the Gobi Desert, perhaps a miraculously surviving representative of the ancient, long-extinct "population" of the Earth.

Translated from the Mongolian, “olgoi” means “large intestine”, and “khorkhoi” means a worm. According to legend, a half-meter worm lives in inaccessible waterless areas of the Gobi Desert. Olgoy-Khorkhoy spends almost all the time in hibernation - he sleeps in holes made in the sands. The worm gets to the surface only in the hottest months of summer, and woe to the person who met him on the way: the olgoy-khorkhoy kills the victim at a distance, throwing out deadly poison, or strikes with an electric discharge upon contact. In a word, you won't get away from him alive….

The isolated position of Mongolia and the policy of its authorities made the fauna of this country practically inaccessible to foreign zoologists. That is why the scientific community knows practically nothing about the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. However, in 1926, the American paleontologist Roy Chapman Andrews, in the book "In the footsteps of an ancient man," spoke about his conversation with the Prime Minister of Mongolia. The latter asked the paleontologist to catch the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. At the same time, the minister pursued personal goals: desert worms once killed one of his family members. But, to the great regret of Andrews, he was not able not only to catch, but even just to see the mysterious worm. Many years later, in 1958, the Soviet science fiction writer, geologist and paleontologist Ivan Efremov returned to the theme of the olgoi-khorkhoi in his book The Road of the Winds. In it, he recounted all the information that he had collected on this subject during reconnaissance expeditions to the Gobi from 1946 to 1949.

In his book, among other testimonies, Ivan Efremov cites the story of an old Mongol man named Tseven from the village of Dalandzadgad, who claimed that the Olgoi-Khorkhoi lived 130 kilometers southeast of the Aimak agricultural region. “No one knows what they are, but olgoi-khorkhoy is a horror,” said the old Mongol. Efremov used these stories about the monster of the sands in his fantastic story, which was originally titled “Olgoi-khorkhoy”. It tells about the death of two Russian explorers who died from the poison of desert worms. The story was entirely fictional, but it was based solely on the folklore evidence of the Mongols.

Ivan Makarle, Czech writer and journalist, author of many works about the mysteries of the Earth, was the next to follow the trail of the mysterious inhabitant of the Asian desert. In the 1990s, Makarle, together with Dr. Jaroslav Prokopets, a specialist in tropical medicine, and cameraman Jiri Skupen, led two expeditions to the most remote corners of the Gobi Desert. Unfortunately, they also failed to catch a single specimen of the worm alive. However, they received evidence of its real existence. Moreover, these evidences were so numerous that they allowed Czech researchers to make and launch on television a program called “The Mysterious Monster of the Sands”.

This was far from the last attempt to unravel the mystery of the existence of the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. In the summer of 1996, another group of researchers, also Czechs, led by Petr Gorky and Mirek Naplava, followed the worm's tracks across a good half of the Gobi Desert. Alas, also to no avail.

Today almost nothing is heard about the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. So far, this Mongolian cryptozoological puzzle is being solved by Mongolian researchers. One of them, the scientist Dondogizhin Tsevegmid, suggests that there is not one kind of worm, but at least two. Again, folk legends forced him to draw a similar conclusion: local residents often also talk about shar-khorkhoi - that is, a yellow worm.

In one of his books, Dondogizhin Tsevegmid mentions the story of a camel driver who met face to face with such shar-khorkhoys in the mountains. At one far from perfect moment, the driver noticed that yellow worms were climbing out of holes in the ground and crawling towards him. Mad with fear, he rushed to run, and then found that almost fifty of these disgusting creatures were trying to surround him. The poor fellow was lucky: he still managed to escape ...

So, today, researchers of the Mongolian phenomenon are inclined to believe that we are talking about a living being, completely unknown to science. However, the zoologist John L. Claudsey-Thompson, one of the renowned specialists in the desert fauna, suspected a species of snake in the Olgoi-Khorkhoi, which the scientific community has yet to get acquainted with. Claudsy-Thompson himself is sure that the unknown desert worm is related to the Oceanian viper. The latter is distinguished by no less "attractive" appearance. In addition, like the olgoy-khorkhoy, the viper is capable of destroying its victims at a distance, splashing poison.

A completely different version is held by the French cryptozoologist Michel Raynal and the Czech Jaroslav Mares. Scientists attribute the Mongolian desert dweller to two-way reptiles that lost their paws during evolution. These reptiles, like desert worms, can be red or brown in color. In addition, it is extremely difficult to distinguish between their head and neck. Opponents of this version, however, rightly point out that no one has heard that these reptiles were poisonous or had an organ capable of producing an electric current.

According to the third version, the olgoi-khorkhoi is an annelids that acquired a special protective skin in desert conditions. Some of these earthworms are known to be capable of squirting venom in self-defense.

Be that as it may, the Olgoi-Khorkhoy remains a mystery to zoologists, which has not yet received a single satisfactory explanation.

If you happen to read the fantastic novel "Dune" by F. Herbert, then you know such a character as Shai-Hulud. It is a giant sandworm capable of absorbing not only people, but also vehicles. Who would have thought that an analogue of such a creature is found on our planet?

Any Mongol will tell you that the dangerous worm Olgoi-Khorkhoi exists, but so far no one has managed to catch it. The search for this "sausage stump" in the Gobi desert has been going on for several decades, but the result is still zero. What kind of creature is this, which, according to rumors, kills its victim with an electric discharge or a poisonous jet?

Kills from afar

The story of the writer and scientist I. Efremov "Olgoi-Khorkhoy" tells about a strange and mysterious animal, whose homeland was the Gobi desert. With its appearance, this work of nature resembles a piece of thick sausage, one meter long. Both of its ends are equally blunt, it is impossible to see the eye or mouth, as well as determine where the head is and where the tail is. This fat, writhing worm only causes disgust.

In the 70s, the story of I. Efremov was perceived by most readers as fantastic. But after some time, many residents of Mongolia started talking about the existence of Olgoi-Khorkhoi. There were rumors that this creature is capable of killing its prey from a distance. Olgoi-Khorkhoy is translated into Russian as "intestinal worm", and it must be said that the mysterious animal really resembles a fragment of the large intestine.

According to some eyewitnesses, the worm produces, others claim that it strikes its opponent with a high-power electric discharge. Even a hardy camel cannot withstand such an attack, and dies on the spot.

There is another type of worm, which is distinguished by a yellow color. The Mongols call her Shar-Khorkhoy. According to eyewitnesses, these creatures become especially active in the summer heat, they spend the rest of their lives in holes.

First evidence of a killer worm

The history of this unusual creature is rooted in the distant past. One could read about it in the stories of our compatriot N. Przhevalsky, and N. Roerich did not leave the worm without attention. Traveling in Tibet, the latter made acquaintance with a lama (this title is given to local religious figures). Lama told Roerich that in his youth he was a member of a caravan sent to study at a local university.

Some of the young people traveled on short Mongolian horses, the rest on camels. Once, after stopping for the night, an incomprehensible chirp was heard, followed by human screams. The Lama looked around and noticed that the camp was surrounded by incomprehensible blue lights. An exclamation was heard: “Olgoi-Khorkhoi!”. People rushed in all directions, some fell dead for no reason.

In 1926, the American writer and scientist R. C. Andrews published a book entitled "In the Footsteps of Ancient Man." And that's when the killer worm became widely known. The American paleontologist heard about the existence of this mystery of nature even before the start of the trip from the Mongolian leaders who issued him permission to travel. He was warned of the danger and asked, if the opportunity presented itself, to catch and bring back a specimen of this animal.

The American promised to comply with the request, while observing all the necessary precautions. However, he did not believe in the veracity of the story he heard. Unfortunately, the scientist failed to find the worm, but he described it in his work. After that, the worm Olgoy Khorkhoy gained worldwide fame.

How does a worm kill

So how does this fiend kill its victim? Usually we are talking about poison, but the possibility of the worm generating electrical discharges of high power should not be ruled out. The locals have an interesting story to tell...

At the end of the last century, Western geologists carried out work in Mongolia. One of the researchers stuck a metal rod into the sand, then his body convulsed, and at the same moment. A moment later, an eerie worm emerged from the sand. There is no doubt that the death of the geologist came from an electrical discharge that passed through the metal.

Apparently, the desert-dwelling Olgoi-Khorkhoi is capable of killing with both poison and electric shock. Such deadly activity is not hunting or sustenance for him. This is just a way of protection, carried out without warning.

Olgoi-Khorkhoi was never caught

Attempts to catch the intestinal worm have been made many times. In the middle of the last century, a scientist of American origin A. Nisbet decided to find the creeping villain without fail. It took several years to obtain permission for the expedition from the Mongolian authorities. In two jeeps, American explorers rushed into the desert and quickly disappeared.

At the request of the American government, the search for an unsuccessful expedition began. Dead scientists were found in a remote area, their bodies were located near cars that were in good condition. The cause of death of the researchers has not been established.

There is an assumption that scientists stumbled upon a cluster of worms, and they went on the attack. Recall that the cars are in excellent condition, the property remained in place, there were no notes with complaints of illness or lack of water. Most likely, death came instantly - it is with such a speed that the intestinal worm kills.

In the 90s of the last century, Czech specialists were engaged in the search for a mysterious creature. The subject of the research itself was not discovered, but it was possible to collect the necessary material proving the reality of the existence of Olgoi-Khorkhoy.

Members of the Russian expedition caught a small yellow worm, presumably a calf. Around the mouth opening, he had several paws, with the help of which Olgoy Khorkhoy instantly buried himself in the sand.

by Notes of the Wild Mistress

The hero of Mongolian folklore - a giant worm - lives in the desert sandy regions of the Gobi. In its appearance, it most of all resembles the insides of an animal. On his body it is impossible to distinguish neither the head nor the eyes. The Mongols call him olgoi-khorkha, and more than anything else they are afraid of meeting him. Not a single scientist in the world has had a chance to see with his own eyes the mysterious inhabitant of the Mongolian deserts. And therefore, for many years, the olgoi-khorkhoy was considered an exclusively folklore character - a fictional monster.

However, at the beginning of the 20th century, researchers drew attention to the fact that legends about the Olgoi-Khorkhoi are told everywhere in Mongolia, and in the most diverse and remote corners of the country, legends about a giant worm are repeated word for word and abound in the same details. And so scientists decided that the basis of ancient legends is true. It may very well be that a strange creature unknown to science lives in the Gobi Desert, perhaps a miraculously surviving representative of the ancient, long-extinct "population" of the Earth.

Translated from the Mongolian, “olgoi” means “large intestine”, and “khorkhoi” means a worm. According to legend, a half-meter worm lives in inaccessible waterless areas of the Gobi Desert. Olgoy-Khorkhoy spends almost all the time in hibernation - he sleeps in holes made in the sands. The worm gets to the surface only in the hottest months of summer, and woe to the person who met him on the way: the olgoy-khorkhoy kills the victim at a distance, throwing out deadly poison, or strikes with an electric discharge upon contact. In a word, you won't get away from him alive….

The isolated position of Mongolia and the policy of its authorities made the fauna of this country practically inaccessible to foreign zoologists. That is why the scientific community knows practically nothing about the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. However, in 1926, the American paleontologist Roy Chapman Andrews, in the book "In the footsteps of an ancient man," spoke about his conversation with the Prime Minister of Mongolia. The latter asked the paleontologist to catch the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. At the same time, the minister pursued personal goals: desert worms once killed one of his family members. But, to the great regret of Andrews, he was not able not only to catch, but even just to see the mysterious worm. Many years later, in 1958, the Soviet science fiction writer, geologist and paleontologist Ivan Efremov returned to the theme of the olgoi-khorkhoi in his book The Road of the Winds. In it, he recounted all the information that he had collected on this subject during reconnaissance expeditions to the Gobi from 1946 to 1949.

In his book, among other testimonies, Ivan Efremov cites the story of an old Mongol man named Tseven from the village of Dalandzadgad, who claimed that the Olgoi-Khorkhoi lived 130 kilometers southeast of the Aimak agricultural region. “No one knows what they are, but olgoi-khorkhoy is a horror,” said the old Mongol. Efremov used these stories about the monster of the sands in his fantastic story, which was originally titled “Olgoi-khorkhoy”. It tells about the death of two Russian explorers who died from the poison of desert worms. The story was entirely fictional, but it was based solely on the folklore evidence of the Mongols.

Ivan Makarle, Czech writer and journalist, author of many works about the mysteries of the Earth, was the next to follow the trail of the mysterious inhabitant of the Asian desert. In the 1990s, Makarle, together with Dr. Jaroslav Prokopets, a specialist in tropical medicine, and cameraman Jiri Skupen, led two expeditions to the most remote corners of the Gobi Desert. Unfortunately, they also failed to catch a single specimen of the worm alive. However, they received evidence of its real existence. Moreover, these evidences were so numerous that they allowed Czech researchers to make and launch on television a program called “The Mysterious Monster of the Sands”.

This was far from the last attempt to unravel the mystery of the existence of the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. In the summer of 1996, another group of researchers, also Czechs, led by Petr Gorky and Mirek Naplava, followed the worm's tracks across a good half of the Gobi Desert. Alas, also to no avail.

Today almost nothing is heard about the Olgoi-Khorkhoi. So far, this Mongolian cryptozoological puzzle is being solved by Mongolian researchers. One of them, the scientist Dondogizhin Tsevegmid, suggests that there is not one kind of worm, but at least two. Again, folk legends forced him to draw a similar conclusion: local residents often also talk about shar-khorkhoi - that is, a yellow worm.

In one of his books, Dondogizhin Tsevegmid mentions the story of a camel driver who met face to face with such shar-khorkhoys in the mountains. At one far from perfect moment, the driver noticed that yellow worms were climbing out of holes in the ground and crawling towards him. Mad with fear, he rushed to run, and then found that almost fifty of these disgusting creatures were trying to surround him. The poor fellow was lucky: he still managed to escape ...

So, today, researchers of the Mongolian phenomenon are inclined to believe that we are talking about a living being, completely unknown to science. However, the zoologist John L. Claudsey-Thompson, one of the renowned specialists in the desert fauna, suspected a species of snake in the Olgoi-Khorkhoi, which the scientific community has yet to get acquainted with. Claudsy-Thompson himself is sure that the unknown desert worm is related to the Oceanian viper. The latter is distinguished by no less "attractive" appearance. In addition, like the olgoy-khorkhoy, the viper is capable of destroying its victims at a distance, splashing poison.

A completely different version is held by the French cryptozoologist Michel Raynal and the Czech Jaroslav Mares. Scientists attribute the Mongolian desert dweller to two-way reptiles that lost their paws during evolution. These reptiles, like desert worms, can be red or brown in color. In addition, it is extremely difficult to distinguish between their head and neck. Opponents of this version, however, rightly point out that no one has heard that these reptiles were poisonous or had an organ capable of producing an electric current.

According to the third version, the olgoi-khorkhoi is an annelids that acquired a special protective skin in desert conditions. Some of these earthworms are known to be capable of squirting venom in self-defense.

Be that as it may, the Olgoi-Khorkhoy remains a mystery to zoologists, which has not yet received a single satisfactory explanation.

The researcher Nikolai Nepomniachtchi wrote the following about him: “What else do they have there,” the driver Grigory said with annoyance, but suddenly he braked sharply and shouted to me: “Look quickly! What?"

The cockpit window was blocked by a radio operator who had jumped down from above. With a gun in his hand, he rushed towards a large dune. Something alive was moving across its surface. This creature had no visible legs, not even a mouth or eyes. Most of all, it looked like a stump of a thick sausage about a meter long. A large and fat worm, an unknown inhabitant of the desert, wriggled on the purple sand. Not being a connoisseur of zoology, I nevertheless immediately realized that we were facing an unknown animal. There were two of them."

This is a fragment from the story of the famous paleontologist and writer I.A. Efremov, written by him after an expedition to the Gobi desert. Further, Efremov talks about how people ran up to mysterious creatures that looked like worms. Suddenly, each worm curled into a ring. Their coloration turned from yellow-gray to violet-blue, and at the ends - bright blue. Suddenly, the radio operator collapsed face down on the sand and remained motionless. The driver ran up to the radio operator, who was lying four meters from the worms, and suddenly, strangely twisted, fell on his side ... The worms disappeared somewhere.

The explanation of the mysterious death of his comrades, which the hero of the story received from the guide and all other experts in Mongolia, was that an animal called the olgoi-khorkha lives in the lifeless deserts. It has never fallen into the hands of any person, partly because it lives in waterless sands, partly because of the fear that the Mongols feel before it. This fear is quite understandable: the animal kills at a distance. What is this mysterious power possessed by the olgoy-khorkhoy, no one knows. Maybe it is a huge electric discharge or poison sprayed by an animal.

Stories about a mysterious creature living in the waterless deserts of Central Asia have been around for a long time. It is mentioned, in particular, by the famous Russian researcher and traveler N.M. Przhevalsky. In the 1950s, the American A. Nisbet went in search of the Olgoi-Khorkhoi to Inner Mongolia. For a long time, the authorities of the Mongolian People's Republic did not give him permission to enter, believing that the American might have other interests besides zoological ones.

In 1954, having received permission, the expedition on two Land Rovers left the village of Sainshand and disappeared. A few months later, at the request of the US government, the authorities of the Mongolian People's Republic organized a search for her. The vehicles were found in a remote area of ​​the desert in perfect working order, not far from them lay the bodies of five members of the expedition and a little further away - the sixth. The bodies of the Americans lay in the sun for a long time, and the cause of death could not be determined.

Some scientists, analyzing reports of olgoe-horhoi, are inclined to the hypothesis that it kills with a potent poison, such as hydrocyanic acid. Creatures are known in nature, in particular the centipede kiwisyak, which kills its victims at a distance with a stream of hydrocyanic acid. However, there is a more exotic hypothesis: the Olgoi-Khorkhoy kills with the help of small ball lightning, which is formed during a powerful electric discharge.

In the summer of 1988, the newspapers "Semilukskaya Zhizn" and "Left Bank" reported on strange events that took place in the city of Lugansk. On May 16, during earthworks in the area of ​​​​the town of the plant. The October Revolution suffered one of the workers. He was taken to the hospital unconscious, with a snake-shaped burn on his left arm. Waking up, the victim explained that he felt an electric shock, although there were no electric cables nearby.

Two months later, six-year-old Dima G. died. The cause of death was an electric shock from an unknown source. Several more similar cases were recorded in 1989 and 1990. All cases are associated with earthworks or with fresh earth delivered from another place. One of the victims said that before losing consciousness, he heard a strange sound, similar to the sobbing of a child.

Finally, in winter, when digging a hole on the estate in the Artyomovsky district of Luhansk, near a heating main, a strange creature was caught that made a similar sound when attacked. Fortunately for himself, the man who dug the hole was wearing thick gloves and was not hurt. He grabbed the creature, put it in a plastic bag and took it to show to a neighbor who worked in a biological laboratory.

So an animal unknown to science ended up in a metal box in a laboratory behind thick armored glass. It looks like a thick lilac worm about half a meter long. Head of the Laboratory Candidate of Biological Sciences V.M. Kulikov claims that this is most likely an unknown mutant. But a certain resemblance to the mysterious Olgoi-Khorkhoi is undoubted.

Mongolia and killing cattle and people, presumably with an electric discharge or poison. The creature is yellow-gray in color.

First references in literature

Original text (English)

It is shaped like a sausage about two feet long, has no head nor leg and it is so poisonous that merely to touch it means instant death. It lives in the most desolate parts of the Gobi Desert…

Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Tserendorj joined the conversation, noting that a relative of his wife's sister had also seen the creature. The professor assured the Mongolian state leaders that only if he gets in his way allergorhai-horhai, it will be extracted with the help of special long steel tongs, and the professor will protect his eyes with black glasses, thus neutralizing the destructive effect of just looking at such a poisonous creature.

In subsequent years, several more expeditions to Mongolia took place, in 1932 a generalizing work “The New Conquest of Central Asia” was published in the first volume of which the same author repeats the description of the animal and the circumstances of the conversation with the then leaders of Mongolia (by 1932, the monarchy in Mongolia was replaced by the Mongolian the People's Republic, the prime minister, Andrews's interlocutor, has already died, and his place at the head of the already republican Council of People's Commissars was taken by another interlocutor of Professor Tserendorzh, who also died by the time this book was published). However, this work contains some additional details regarding the habitat of this creature:

It is said to live in the driest sandy parts of the Western Gobi.

Original text (English)

It is reported to live in the most arid, sandy regions of the western Gobi.

Professor Andrews himself was more than skeptical about the reality of the existence of this creature, since the professor was unable to meet any real witnesses to its existence.

Efremov's story

In the period 1946-1949, the USSR Academy of Sciences conducted a series of expeditions to the Gobi Desert, led by Ivan Efremov. He described this journey in the book "Road of the winds". In the book, the author directly points to the main goal of the expedition - to discover the excavation site of the American professor Andrews, made by him in the 1920s, where numerous dinosaur remains were found. I. Efremov carefully studied the books of the American professor, but he deliberately did not give information in his publications that would allow him to determine even the approximate location of his so-called. " Flaming  rocks" (as in his books Andrews called the deposit of fossil remains of dinosaurs he discovered). As a result of unsuccessful searches for this place, Efremov and his expedition comrades themselves managed to discover another bone deposit in a completely different place - as is now known, about 300 km west of Bayanzag (or Andrews' "Flaming Rocks", the real Mongolian name of the place means "rich in saxaul" ).

Even during the Great Patriotic War, when I. Efremov was just hatching plans to visit Mongolia, he, under the influence of Andrews' books, wrote a story called "Allergoy-Khorkhoy", as he was led by an inaccurate transcription of an American paleontologist. Subsequently, having already visited Mongolia, Ivan Efremov became convinced of the inaccuracy of the name and corrected it in accordance with the correct Mongolian pronunciation and spelling. Now the Russian and Mongolian records of the name of the animal coincide literally.

In the story, Olgoi-Khorkhoi kills at a distance with something like an electric discharge. In the afterword to the story, Efremov notes:

During my travels in the Mongolian Gobi desert, I met many people who told me about a terrible worm that lives in the most inaccessible, waterless and sandy corners of the Gobi desert. This is a legend, but it is so widespread among the Gobis that in the most diverse regions the mysterious worm is described everywhere in the same way and with great detail; one should think that there is truth in the basis of the legend. Apparently, in fact, a strange creature still unknown to science lives in the Gobi Desert, perhaps a relic of the ancient, extinct population of the Earth.

Other references

In the works of A. and B. Strugatsky

Olgoy-Khorkhoy is also mentioned in the stories of Arkady and Boris Strugatsky “The Country of Crimson Clouds”, “The Tale of the Troika” and Boris Strugatsky’s novel “The Powerless of the World of this”. The sandy Martian leech “sora-tobu hiru” (空飛蛭 - a sky-flying leech (translated from Japanese)), also mentioned in several works of the Strugatsky brothers (for the first time in “Noon, XXII century. Return ").

S. Akhmetov and A. Yanter. "Blue Death"

Olgoi-Khorkhoy is also described in the work of Spartak Akhmetov and Alexander Yanter "Blue Death"