Category
page 1Quechua legendary creatures
Amaru
serpent or dragon deity from Andean mythlogies
Pishtaco
thumb|upright=1.15|Pishtako, Peruvian Retablos|Peruvian Retablo, Ayacucho
A '''''' (in Northern Quechua "slaughterer, cutthroat"), (in Southern Quechua, similar meaning) or (in Aymara,"slaughterer") is a folkloric boogeyman figure in the Andes region of South America, particularly in Peru and Bolivia, which extracts the fat of its victims.
Chullachaqui
thumb|Clay statuette from Argentina, on display at the Bern Historical Museum
right|thumb|The legend of the Chullachaqui Mural (Iquitos - Peru)
The Chullachaki (Quechua, "one-footed", from chulla or ''ch'ulla = single, odd, unpaired, asymmetric, chaki'' = foot; spelling sometimes also used in Spanish) or Chullachaqui (Hispanicized spelling), also known as the Shapishico, is a mythical forest creature of the Peruvian and Brazilian Amazonian jungle.