![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Hmm.. Actually, as the legends go, they were more than simply tall.
There is, if my sources are correct, a 7 foot skeleton kept under storage at the Mark Twain Bookstore in Virginia City, Nevada.
But like most stories, the whereabouts of the giants disappear mysteriously. Contrary to popular scientific belief, I do very much think these Si-Te-Cah historical existed. Many of them were 6 to 6ft6 inches tall and some 7 footers were found. They had reddish hair, either stained that way from age, or because they were Caucasian.
There still exists a lower mandible and cranium of one of these alleged Si-Te-Cah found at Lovelock cave. It resides at the Humboldt Museum in Winnemucca, Nevada.
Links with some photos:
—Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.99.204.61 (talk • contribs) 09:15, December 26, 2005
What is it with you people and a non-Amerindian presence in the Americas?! They WEREN'T "caucasian" and this isn't a forum to spread unscientific, impossible nonsense! - The Mummy — Preceding unsigned comment added by 51.6.11.167 (talk) 02:53, 3 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Smells like bullshit to me."Only to you" Wareq
to
That is to say: an ancient race of red-headed 2-meter natives of Nevada? N*γa, puh-leaze. Go to Uncyclopedia or the Weekly World News or something. Or at least stick in that old fake photo of a woman unearthing a "giant" skeleton. Wareq (04:00, April 25, 2006) (UTC)
So you simply dismiss actual physical evidence by saying it’s made up, you dismiss historic and oratory history by saying they made that up also? You are also extremely naive if you don't believe archaeological evidence has been hidden or conveniently destroyed countless times throughout history. Did you ever consider that the legends of Giants and Gods are so VERY common because they were real? Or at the VERY least an interpretation of real events, Did the South Americans not also think the Europeans where Gods when they turned up with their advanced technology? Why do you dismiss our ancestor’s memory and education as fantasy? Don't you realise that if what you say is true it would be like you believing Star Wars is real?
Anyway back on topic The hole I am curious about, provide this is the actual evidence from the cave.
http://www.sydhav.no/giants/lovelock.htm
Why do they only compare the jaw bone? Why not the whole skull side by side? Appears to me something is being hidden here.
But in saying that there are far too many occurrences of Red Haired Giants across the world to be so easily dismissed as fantasy, especially consider your argument is basically “Na ahh” —Preceding unsigned comment added by 125.237.90.214 (talk) 01:16, 6 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I found some very interesting info about this: http://www.internationalbigfootsociety.com/html/article.php?id=91
Here is the story by Sarah Winnemucca from her book "Life Among the Paiutes":
Among the traditions of our people is one of a small tribe of barbarians who used to live along the Humboldt River. It was many hundred years ago. They used to waylay my people and kill and eat them. They would dig large holes in our trails at night, and if any of our people travelled at night, which they did, for they were afraid of these barbarous people, they would oftentimes fall into these holes. That tribe would even eat their own dead— yes, they would even come and dig up our dead after they were buried, and would carry them off and eat them. Now and then they would come and make war on my people. They would fight, and as fast as they killed one another on either side, the women would carry off those who were killed. My people say they were very brave. When they were fighting they would jump up in the air after the arrows that went over their heads, and shoot the same arrows back again. My people took some of them into their families, but they could not make them like themselves. So at last they made war on them. This war lasted a long time. Their number was about twenty-six hundred (2600). The war lasted some three years. My people killed them in great numbers, and what few were left went into the thick bush. My people set the hush on fire. This was right above Humboldt Lake. Then they went to work and made tuly or bulrush boats, and went into Humboldt Lake. They could not live there very long without fire. They were nearly starving. My people were watching them all round the lake, and would kill them as fast as they would come on land. At last one night they all landed on the east side of the lake, and went into a cave near the mountains. It was a most horrible place, for my people watched at the mouth of the cave, and would kill them as they came out to get water. My people would ask them if they would be like us, and not eat people like coyotes or beasts. They talked the same language, but they would not give up. At last my people were tired, and they went to work and gathered wood, and began to fill up the mouth of the cave. Then the poor fools began to pull the wood inside till the cave was full. At last my people set it on fire; at the same tittle they cried out to them, “Will you give up and he like men, and not eat people like beasts? Say quick —we will put out the fire.” No answer came from them. My people said they thought the cave must be very deep or far into the mountain. They had never seen the cave nor known it was there until then. They called out to them as loud as they could, “Will you give up? Say so, or you will all die.” But no answer came. Then they all left the place. In ten days some went back to see if the fire had gone out. They went back to my third or fifth great-grandfather and told him they must all be dead, there was such a horrible smell. This tribe was called people-eaters, and after my people had killed them all, the people round us called us Say-do-carah. It means conqueror; it also means “enemy.” I do not know how we came by the name of Piutes. It is not an Indian word. I think it is misinterpreted. Sometimes we are called Pine-nut eaters, for we are the only tribe that lives in the country where Pine-nuts grow. My people say that the tribe we exterminated had reddish hair. I have some of their hair, which has been handed down from father to son. I have a dress which has been in our family a great many years, trimmed with this reddish hair. I am going to wear it some time when I lecture. It is called the mourning dress, and no one has such a dress but my family.
Edrigu 15:24, 2 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I just visited the cave Saturday July 28, 2007. Might be worth starting a page called "Lovelock Cave" and merging some of the material from this page to the new one. There is a wealth of internet information about the cave site, and I have to say being there personally is a great experience! Kidshare 18:22, 29 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
One of the most common misconceptions is that only europeans and/or caucasian-type people have diversity among themselves. If they were red-headed(if not really painted), doesn't mean they were any euro type. I myself have seen(personally) red colored(some wheat-type looking) hair among natives(especially is south america). Some had their dna tested, and oh, guess what? They turned out to be native american after all. So it was a native tribe they talked about(they even spoke the same language). Or hell, possibly even neanderthals(strongly doubt it though). Silly way of thinking really. Diversity(different hair type, eyes, skin tone, etc) exist among all people(ethnicities), it's just a little more frequent among us(Europeans and/or caucasian-type). Native Americans(just like anybody else), come in different shapes, colors, and sizes.etc.Schweinsteiger54321 (talk) 19:49, 9 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you Edrigu for giving us a great quotation from the Paiute princess Winnemucca (who wrote that down in 1883) and establishes that there was a long standing tradition of a Red headed tribe considerably before any excavations of Lovelock cave occurred (there was 10 to 14 feet of bat guano covering the remains). How is it that every single one of the mummies in the cave had every bit of their dark hair "stained" red by chance bat guano and it is just a "coincidence" that the Paiutes had a tradition of encountering Red haired people in that very vicinity generations early? I think the article should mention these pre-existing facts so that the reader can come to his or her own conclusion.
What about Giants? I agree, the earliest legends do not mention the size of the Siwash/Si-Te-Cah directly, only that they were cannibals and very fierce warriors. And it is very tempting as Adrianne Mayor has pointed out, and very possible that some mistaken Sloth or Cow bones got mixed in with the human skeletons and were later exaggerated... but that still does not acount for:
These facts alone are anomalies, but when added together do deserve some serious answers. Can animal bones explain extremely large sandals? can they explain extremely "robust" homo-sapien mandibles and skulls, or complete mummies intact? The reader can decide.
Caucasians?
As someone has pointed out Red heads have been documented among South American Indians, and such a phenomenon is within the diverse Native American DNA. It is very possible these "Si-Te-Cah" had different DNA and different ancestry from the Paiutes, or at least originally did. Perhaps like Spirit Cave man, they may have been more related to the the Ainu of Japan than to any modern Native Americans. It is only speculation at any rate.
--75.175.81.187 (talk) 06:58, 7 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]
First, this article should be based on reliable sources, not newspaper articles, etc. The subject is a bit complicated, but we need to be clear that Hopkins doesn't mention giants (which you can see from the quote above which is her only mention of this tribe)[1]. You can download an interesting article here[2] about this "small tribe of barbarians" and I've found more sources. I'm trying to find what sources actually call them giants. This[3] says "Lovelock Cave (Sai'itoo or "Sai's hole ): The story about the enemy people who were killed by le Northern Paiutes in Lovelock Cave is well known to [modern Northern Paiutes (see Appendix l) (which says "” Loud and Harrington (1929:166) questioned Hopkins name identification for Saydo-carah. They state (1929:166): “The Northern Paiute applied to the ancient people the name sai-duka’a, “tule-eaters,” a name which might be applied to any people with this habit. This may account for the application of the name or its shortened form sai’i to the Pit Rive Indians and the form Saidyuka to Indians of eastern Oregon.” "" . According to different renditions of th story, the people had red hair, were cannibals, and were known |by several similar names - Sai'ru'qa', Say-do-carah, Sai-duka'a, Sa-duc-ca, Sai-duokas, Saiduka'a..." - (see sources as well). A museum webpage does call them giants, but also that they may be 'fairy tales' used by parents to keep their chldren away from dangerous places.[4].
This article "John Reid's Redheaded "Giants" of Central Nevada: Fact or Fiction?"[[5]] is a gold mine about the bones in the cave and the 'giant' label. I'm keen on reliable sources and the Brooks qualify as reliable sources, see [6] and [7]. On the other hand, books like Return of the Stargods are not (and I'm not convinced about Daniel Ricky's book on Nevada[8], can't find out who he is). The 'Saiduka', an alternative name, are discussed here [9] (on at least 3 pages). Dougweller (talk) 12:04, 6 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]
This source[10] writes about Paiute mythological giants and their confusion with real local groups with a marsh-culture economy (the names relate to the names here).
And finally, but about another Paiute giant story not related to this article at all, [11].
[12] is Paiute-oriented, not sure if relevant here. Dougweller (talk) 12:09, 6 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]
[13], [14], Dougweller (talk) 12:04, 6 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Adding: most of the article is based on the Loud/Harrington book but there also is a more recent book from Mayor; relevant updates are probably appropriate... —PaleoNeonate – 05:05, 8 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I'm surprised not to find any dating of the remains and artifacts acquired at this location. Are they 1,000 years old or 100 years old? Is there any additional testing that has been done? 69.125.134.86 (talk) 22:54, 15 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Throughout various articles, this one notwithstanding, there is a general bias towards explaining things of unknown origin based on what we have seen or otherwise already know, along with a smug "suspicion" and "debunking" motif that is weaponized to shut down any controversy before it begins. This is a mistake, a stupid one, as entirely dangerous as dismissing the subject matter altogether. Take this article: The so-called "Archeology" section is a giant heap of assumptions and is near entirely unscientific, yet reads like it is fact. It is not. The unpalatable truth of the matter is that there is not, as yet, sufficient historical or scientifically valid material to write or even outline a definitive chronicle of the Si-Te-Cah or " red Haired Giants." Though this is far from the only article that suffers from this inconvenience, and indeed, is becoming so prevalent as to render many articles into rhetorical flummery, packed with assumptions, and touting the most current homogenous narrative, it is a good place to start. If you're going to stick with the story that the natives have given, don't put some wish-wash that some archeologists spouted on assumption. I hope this can be fixed. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.14.245.202 (talk) 07:18, 23 March 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Recent DNA analysis of an individual from Lovelock Cave, identified as Lovelock4, carbon dated to 1,800 years before present was found to belong to a Bronze Age haplogroup that originated in Central Asia and migrated into Europe, Turkic people known as Huns. It may be the arrival of Huns from Europe that carried the symbol of the swastika to North America. 2600:100C:B05F:BCF9:A819:E15A:EEBC:4D18 (talk) 18:23, 7 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
It seems like, the article says "archaeologists were still able to retrieve 10,000 Northern Paiute artifacts from the cave", but https://www.onlinenevada.org/articles/lovelock-culture seems to think that the artifacts (and human remains) are more likely to be from a different tribe who weren't the Paiutes, and Loud and Harrington don't seem to say anything either way. Is there a source for this, or maybe should it be changed to "Native American artifacts"? Wombat140 (talk) 16:26, 2 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]
It seems like, most versions of the legends just do not back up the "giants" thing, from what I've been able to find out - it's only a small, much-publicised minority of them that say that - and even "cannibals" isn't unanimous, but "red-haired cannibal giants" seems to be the best-known thing about the Si-Te-Cah legend and people keep putting it into the lead paragraph, so I've tried to address it there. Wombat140 (talk) 11:52, 3 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]