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Myths and legends about the origin of mankind!
1, Inca myth: Pachakamak, the god of creation, carved many stone statues, including ordinary people, leaders, pregnant women and children. He asked the gods to carve their names on stone statues and tell them what kind of people should live in what area.

The next morning, when the first ray of sunlight lit up these stone statues, they all came back to life.

2. African Myth: The creator Jooc wants to create a person. He picked up the dirt and said, people must be able to work in the fields, so they must have legs like flamingos. People also know how to grow millet, so they have to have two arms, one holding a spade and the other pulling weeds.

Then he pinched out his eyes, mouth, tongue and ears, and created a human being who could live on his own and know how to worship him.

3. Australian Myth: The creator Poundgill cut off three pieces of bark with a big knife. He daubed some mud on a piece of bark and then mixed it with a knife. Pinch the clay figurine on another piece of bark, and then blow hard into the clay figurine's mouth, nostrils and navel.

These little clay figurines came to life at once. They jumped on the third tree skin and jumped around the creator.

4.Diogno Myth: When the world is dark and chaotic, there is nothing but the sea of Wang Yang. There are two brothers living at the bottom of the sea. My brother's mosaic came out of the sea to create the earth, and then the sun and the moon were created from the mud.

After dawn, he made a man out of clay, and later made a woman out of a man's rib.

5. China Myth: The legend that Nu Wa was popular in the Warring States Period. "Shan Hai Jing" records that "there are ten gods, named Nu Wa Chang, who turn into gods". In Yulan, Tian Ping, it is said that Nu Wa created a chicken on the first day of the first month, a dog on the second day, a pig on the third day, a sheep on the fourth day, a cow on the fifth day and a horse on the sixth day.

On the seventh day of the seventh day, Nuwa mixed loess and water into mud and made many small clay figurines according to her own image. These clay figurines danced around her as soon as they landed. Later, she thought it was too slow to squeeze the mud, so she covered a cane with mud, and the spilled mud fell to the ground and became a person.

In order to let human beings reproduce, she created a wedding ceremony to let people know the method of "making people" and carry on the family line with her own strength.