British artist has unveiled her "photofit" of a yeti from the professed eye-witness accounts of Himalayans - and said she saw what is claimed to be the scalp of one. Pollyanna Pickering was in the Bhutan region, gathering material for a new exhibition, when she came across what experts are claiming is "potentially explosive" proof that the mythical creatures have existed. The 65-year-old artist from Derbyshire said she was able to draw a sketch of a yeti after speaking to the indigenous Brokpas people. And she was shown what is claimed to be a genuine 100-year-old Yeti scalp, with bone still attached, when she visited a monastery in a remote part of the region. She said: "I was told this was from a migoi - their name for the yeti. All I know is, it was bigger than any human or ape scalp I'd ever seen. "It had tufts of reddish-black fur coming out of it and was mounted on a pole and seen as a holy relic." Ms Pickering said she was touring the region with her daughter and business manager when she made the discovery. UK yeti expert Jonathan Downes, of the Centre of Fortean Zoology, which studies 'mystery' animals, said: "This is potentially explosive. If this scalp is authentic and has bone still attached, it will be probably the single most important zoological find since the discovery of the coelacanth in the late 1930s." Ms Pickering said she was shown the relic by a caretaker monk."He got very excited when he found out we were English, said he was a huge Beckham fan and then ushered us through to the back," she said. She said the courtesy did not extend to photography, which is banned from all monasteries. The artist, from Oaker, said: "The Brokpas tribe are the original inhabitants of the Sakten area of the Bhutan. "I was amazed when they told me of regular sightings, close encounters and even tales of people being carried off by the migoi.
