Werewolf V Dire Wolf: The Differences
Here’s one admittedly inspired by the popularity of these
creatures thanks to the spectacular success of the Harry Potter and Game of
Thrones sagas. During one of my many conversations analysing these stories, my
friends and I began wondering who would emerge victorious in a battle; the
werewolf or the dire wolf. And then we realised we were not at all sure of the
differences between the two. So the quest to find out began.
First and foremost are the historical differences between
the two. The werewolf is a mythical creature whose presence has been noted in
folklore dating all the way back to ancient Greece. The dire wolf, on the other
hand, was a real species that once roamed the face of the Earth.
The werewolf began to gain prominence in European mythology
at about the same time as persecution of witches began, from the 14th
century onwards. Indeed, people were actually tried for being werewolves in the
same manner they were for being witches. Dire wolves and humans existed side by
side for over 6,000 years in the Americas, though there is an argument that the
human race led to their extinction.
To be fair to the werewolf, we don’t have any more evidence
that they don’t exist than we do that that wizards and warlocks don’t exist. However,
since no scientific study has been able to have been done on them, mythology
continues to remain our biggest source of information about them. Stories say
that the werewolf masquerades as a normal man or woman, changing into a
werewolf during a full moon. Some accounts tell us that the werewolf chooses to
shape shift, others that werewolves were normal people who were cursed to have
to endure this double life.
Even in human form werewolves are said to carry tell-tale
signs of what they are. It’s best to be on the lookout for eyebrows which meet
in the middle and curved fingernails. After they change into wolf form, most
cultures paint the werewolf as indistinguishable from normal wolves aside from having
no tail, being larger than the average wolf, and retaining human eyes. The werewolf
enjoys devouring humans, and a bite from one can condemn you to the werewolf
life.
In contrast, scientists have found enough archaeological evidence
of the dire wolf that they have been able to construct skeletons, which give us
enormous insight into the size and physical characteristics of the species. The
dire wolf existed for around 1.79 million years, becoming extinct 10,000 years
ago.
Though the dire wolf was the largest member of the wolf
family, it did not reach the proportions portrayed by GRR. Martin’s dire
wolves. It could grow to nearly five feet in length, and weighed up to 174lbs.
The dire wolf was 25% larger than the average grey wolf, and had bigger teeth.
However, despite the dire wolf being physically very similar to the modern grey
wolf, it could bite with 129% of the force of its grey cousin. The dire wolf
began to die out around 16,000 years ago, unable to compete with the faster
grey wolf, the saber tooth tiger, and the climate changes that the newly
arrived man may have been imposing.
So there are the differences. One a mythical beast, the
other a real Earth dweller. Both bigger than the fearsome-enough wolves we know
today, but the werewolf containing a pleasure for preying on humans, whilst the
dire wolf armed itself with a strong bite. It’s unlikely the two will ever come
head to head, but it would undoubtedly be a close call if they did.