UNVERIFIEDCRYPTIDS

Chupacabra

A cryptid first reported in Puerto Rico in 1995, blamed for livestock mutilations, whose name translates to 'goat-sucker.'

Ctrl+K

OVERVIEW

The Chupacabra is a cryptid that first appeared in Puerto Rico in 1995 when eight sheep were found dead with puncture wounds in their necks, completely drained of blood. The name 'Chupacabra' (goat-sucker) was coined by Puerto Rican media. Descriptions vary: the original Puerto Rican accounts described a bipedal, lizard-like creature with spines along its back, while later reports in Mexico and the American Southwest describe a hairless, dog-like creature with a pronounced spinal ridge. The 1995 outbreak was followed by a wave of livestock mutilations across Latin America and the southern United States. The dog-like Chupacabras have been confirmed to be coyotes or dogs with severe mange.

KNOWN FACTS

Multiple livestock mutilation incidents have been investigated and documented

Witness sketches from different locations show consistent descriptions

Puerto Rican authorities investigated the 1995 incidents

Later carcasses were captured on trail cameras (later identified as mangy canids)

The spread pattern from Puerto Rico to Brazil and Mexico is geographically consistent

CLAIMS

Livestock found dead with two puncture wounds and completely drained of blood

The creature has spines or quills along its back that can be raised

It moves in a hopping or gliding motion

Sightings spread from Puerto Rico through Latin America to the U.S.

The creature has no fear of humans and returns to kill repeatedly

EVIDENCE FOR

Multiple livestock mutilation incidents have been investigated and documented

Witness sketches from different locations show consistent descriptions

Puerto Rican authorities investigated the 1995 incidents

Later carcasses were captured on trail cameras (later identified as mangy canids)

The spread pattern from Puerto Rico to Brazil and Mexico is geographically consistent

EVIDENCE AGAINST

The dog-like Chupacabras have been DNA-tested and proven to be coyotes or dogs with severe mange

The bipedal reptilian descriptions may have been influenced by the 1995 film 'Species'

Livestock deaths with puncture wounds can be caused by predators or scavengers

No body of a unique creature has ever been captured or studied

Mass hysteria and media amplification contributed to the spread of sightings

OPEN QUESTIONS

No open questions recorded.

SOURCES

El Nuevo Día — Puerto Rico News Archives (1995)News
Texas Parks and Wildlife — Chupacabra DNA AnalysisGovernment
The Chupacabra Catches — Benjamin RadfordBook

TIMELINE

1995-03

First Chupacabra attacks reported in Puerto Rico

1995-08

Reports spread across Puerto Rico; media coins the name

1996

First reports in mainland United States

2000s

DNA testing confirms dog-like Chupacabras are mangy canids

RELATED INVESTIGATIONS

Shadow Archive separates documented facts from claims, counterarguments, and open questions. It does not present unsupported allegations as confirmed fact.