Grouping | Monster |
---|---|
Sub grouping | Shapeshifter |
Folklore | Yup'ik, Legendary creature |
Other name(s) | A-Mi-Kuk Amikut Qamungelriit [1] |
Country | United States of America |
Region | Alaska |
The Amikuk is a creature of Yup'ik legend, said to live within the ground.
As a shapeshifter, the Amikuk is said to take many forms, and to behave differently dependent on where a person encounters them. In the sea, it is reported to be hairless with four arms. [2] Its skin is leathery, and it will attack hunters in their kayaks, dragging them under the water to be eaten. [3] As it lives within the ground, the Amikuk will pursue hunters onto land, swimming through the earth as easily as they swim through the water. [4] [1]
In its natural habitat within the earth itself, the Amikuk is said to turn the surface a person is walking on into quicksand by quickly "swimming" around them. [4] If a person is holding a walking stick, they will become tired as this is happening. The Amikuk will then swim upwards, into the person themselves, making the person they now inhabit weak. [4] An Amikuk may also jump through a person, which causes them to "lie down and [die]". [1]
The Amikuk can also take the form of a human, which it may do when it is "tired of being amikut for a long time". [1] In human form, the Amikuk may be referred to as a Qamungelriit. [1] Yup'ik elders describe coming across an Amikuk pulling a sled across the ice, which it can only do in a straight line. If a person encounters an Amikuk in human form, they should sit down with their back to the creature, and not speak to it. [1] The Amikuk is then said to offer gifts of increasing value. [2] The legends state that a person should be silent until the Amikuk has offered the person everything they need, or everything that is on their mind. [1] [3]
When the Amikuk is shot, it is said to multiply into eight beings. [4]
A traditional Yup'ik mask representing the Amikuk by Aarnaquq (a.k.a. Phillip John Charette) is on permanent display at the Portland Art Museum. [5]