Asdrúbal López Orozco , nacido en Villahermosa, Tolima, en 1962, es un prolÃfico autor y editor colombiano. Con formación en Administración Educativa y Derecho, ha enfocado gran parte de su carrera en la divulgación de la cosmogonÃa y la imaginaria popular de Colombia y América. Su obra no solo busca entretener, sino también fomentar una toma de conciencia sobre la importancia de nuestras raÃces y la relación del ser humano con la naturaleza. Detalles del Libro y su Estructura
First published in 2008 by Editorial Educativa Kingkolor Ltda. in Bogotá, this 90-page book serves as an accessible introduction to Colombia’s most iconic folklore. It was illustrated by Carlos Daniel Ardila Mateus, and its ISBN is 978-958-8260-66-2.
Colombia es un paÃs tejido con hilos de realismo mágico. Antes de que Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez popularizara Macondo, las montañas, los rÃos y las llanuras ya estaban habitados por seres fantásticos. La Patasola, el Mohán, la Madre Monte y el Hombre Caimán no son simples cuentos de miedo; son expresiones vivas de la identidad cultural, el mestizaje y la geografÃa nacional.
Relatos oscuros que ocurren en la selva húmeda y los manglares.
López Orozco rastreó la versión original de este mito. Cuenta la historia de un hombre que observaba a los caimanes desde la orilla del rÃo Magdalena. Un hechicero le dio una pócima para volverse caimán por las noches y robar ganado. El problema llegó cuando no pudo regresar a su forma humana. El autor añade un detalle escalofriante: en la ribera, los pescadores juraban escuchar el llanto del hombre-caimán mezclado con el bramido del animal.
Searching for Asdrúbal López Orozco's Mitos y leyendas de Colombia
| Legend/Myth | Description | Moral or Cultural Significance | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | A beautiful, ghostly woman with golden hair and green eyes who protects bodies of fresh water. | A warning against contaminating or disrespecting water sources, a sacred resource in many indigenous cultures. | | La Madremonte | A fierce, moss-covered protector of the forests and animals, who punishes those who harm nature. | Embodies the indigenous and campesino principle of environmental stewardship; a guardian against ecological destruction. | | La Patasola | A shapeshifter who appears as a beautiful woman to lure unfaithful men into the jungle, where she reveals a single, monstrous leg and attacks. | A stern warning against infidelity, lust, and the dangers of straying from the righteous path. | | El Mohán (Poira) | A monstrous, hairy creature with large hands, often found near rivers, feared by fishermen and travelers. | Represents the untamed, dangerous forces of nature, particularly fast-moving rivers and their mysterious depths. | | El Tunjo | A small, solid gold pre-Columbian figure that is said to come to life, laughing and moving, to lead greedy treasure hunters to their doom. | A stark allegory for the destructive power of greed ("La fiebre del oro"), common in mining regions. | | La Llorona | The spectral "Weeping Woman," who wanders near bodies of water mourning her drowned or murdered children. | A pan-Latin American legend about guilt, remorse, and the consequences of a mother's fatal actions. | | La Candileja | A terrifying ball of fire, said to be the soul of an overindulgent grandmother, that chases adulterers and drunkards. | A powerful warning about the moral dangers of permissiveness and the responsibility of raising children. |
es una obra literaria fundamental escrita por el investigador colombiano Asdrúbal López Orozco . Publicada originalmente por la Editorial Educativa Kingkolor, esta recopilación de 90 páginas rescata la tradición oral, la cosmogonÃa y la imaginación popular de las distintas regiones de Colombia. Estudiantes y docentes buscan con frecuencia el texto en formato PDF para fines académicos y pedagógicos.
His work emerged during a period in Colombia where there was a concerted effort to forge a unified national identity amidst political and social division. By turning the spotlight onto the shared myths of the land—stories that transcend political borders—López Orozco helped foster a sense of cultural unity.
A legendary figure from Tolima associated with rivers; he can transform into animals.
A seductive female spirit who tramples and triturates men who lead "dissolute" lives. Regional Specialties: The book also details urban legends like the "Sacerdote sin Cabeza" (Headless Priest) and historical mysteries like those of La Candelaria in Bogotá. About the Author: Asdrúbal López Orozco
Originario de la costa Caribe, especÃficamente de la población de Plato, Magdalena. Cuenta la historia de un hombre cuya obsesión por espiar a las mujeres desnudas que se bañaban en el rÃo lo llevó a usar una pócima para convertirse en caimán. Debido a un accidente, la transformación quedó a medias, dejándole cabeza humana y cuerpo de reptil, condenándolo a la soledad y al destierro de la sociedad. El valor del formato digital (PDF) en la educación actual
Asdrúbal López Orozco , nacido en Villahermosa, Tolima, en 1962, es un prolÃfico autor y editor colombiano. Con formación en Administración Educativa y Derecho, ha enfocado gran parte de su carrera en la divulgación de la cosmogonÃa y la imaginaria popular de Colombia y América. Su obra no solo busca entretener, sino también fomentar una toma de conciencia sobre la importancia de nuestras raÃces y la relación del ser humano con la naturaleza. Detalles del Libro y su Estructura
First published in 2008 by Editorial Educativa Kingkolor Ltda. in Bogotá, this 90-page book serves as an accessible introduction to Colombia’s most iconic folklore. It was illustrated by Carlos Daniel Ardila Mateus, and its ISBN is 978-958-8260-66-2.
Colombia es un paÃs tejido con hilos de realismo mágico. Antes de que Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez popularizara Macondo, las montañas, los rÃos y las llanuras ya estaban habitados por seres fantásticos. La Patasola, el Mohán, la Madre Monte y el Hombre Caimán no son simples cuentos de miedo; son expresiones vivas de la identidad cultural, el mestizaje y la geografÃa nacional.
Relatos oscuros que ocurren en la selva húmeda y los manglares.
López Orozco rastreó la versión original de este mito. Cuenta la historia de un hombre que observaba a los caimanes desde la orilla del rÃo Magdalena. Un hechicero le dio una pócima para volverse caimán por las noches y robar ganado. El problema llegó cuando no pudo regresar a su forma humana. El autor añade un detalle escalofriante: en la ribera, los pescadores juraban escuchar el llanto del hombre-caimán mezclado con el bramido del animal.
Searching for Asdrúbal López Orozco's Mitos y leyendas de Colombia
| Legend/Myth | Description | Moral or Cultural Significance | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | A beautiful, ghostly woman with golden hair and green eyes who protects bodies of fresh water. | A warning against contaminating or disrespecting water sources, a sacred resource in many indigenous cultures. | | La Madremonte | A fierce, moss-covered protector of the forests and animals, who punishes those who harm nature. | Embodies the indigenous and campesino principle of environmental stewardship; a guardian against ecological destruction. | | La Patasola | A shapeshifter who appears as a beautiful woman to lure unfaithful men into the jungle, where she reveals a single, monstrous leg and attacks. | A stern warning against infidelity, lust, and the dangers of straying from the righteous path. | | El Mohán (Poira) | A monstrous, hairy creature with large hands, often found near rivers, feared by fishermen and travelers. | Represents the untamed, dangerous forces of nature, particularly fast-moving rivers and their mysterious depths. | | El Tunjo | A small, solid gold pre-Columbian figure that is said to come to life, laughing and moving, to lead greedy treasure hunters to their doom. | A stark allegory for the destructive power of greed ("La fiebre del oro"), common in mining regions. | | La Llorona | The spectral "Weeping Woman," who wanders near bodies of water mourning her drowned or murdered children. | A pan-Latin American legend about guilt, remorse, and the consequences of a mother's fatal actions. | | La Candileja | A terrifying ball of fire, said to be the soul of an overindulgent grandmother, that chases adulterers and drunkards. | A powerful warning about the moral dangers of permissiveness and the responsibility of raising children. |
es una obra literaria fundamental escrita por el investigador colombiano Asdrúbal López Orozco . Publicada originalmente por la Editorial Educativa Kingkolor, esta recopilación de 90 páginas rescata la tradición oral, la cosmogonÃa y la imaginación popular de las distintas regiones de Colombia. Estudiantes y docentes buscan con frecuencia el texto en formato PDF para fines académicos y pedagógicos.
His work emerged during a period in Colombia where there was a concerted effort to forge a unified national identity amidst political and social division. By turning the spotlight onto the shared myths of the land—stories that transcend political borders—López Orozco helped foster a sense of cultural unity.
A legendary figure from Tolima associated with rivers; he can transform into animals.
A seductive female spirit who tramples and triturates men who lead "dissolute" lives. Regional Specialties: The book also details urban legends like the "Sacerdote sin Cabeza" (Headless Priest) and historical mysteries like those of La Candelaria in Bogotá. About the Author: Asdrúbal López Orozco
Originario de la costa Caribe, especÃficamente de la población de Plato, Magdalena. Cuenta la historia de un hombre cuya obsesión por espiar a las mujeres desnudas que se bañaban en el rÃo lo llevó a usar una pócima para convertirse en caimán. Debido a un accidente, la transformación quedó a medias, dejándole cabeza humana y cuerpo de reptil, condenándolo a la soledad y al destierro de la sociedad. El valor del formato digital (PDF) en la educación actual
The DeviceObjectType class is intended to characterize a specific Device. The UML diagram corresponding to the DeviceObjectType class is shown in Figure 3‑1.

Figure 3‑1. UML diagram of the DeviceObjectType class
The property table of the DeviceObjectType class is given in Table 3‑1.
Table 3‑1. Properties of the DeviceObjectType class
|
Name |
Type |
Multiplicity |
Description |
|
Description |
cyboxCommon: StructuredTextType |
0..1 |
The Description property captures a technical description of the Device Object. Any length is permitted. Optional formatting is supported via the structuring_format property of the StructuredTextType class. |
|
Device_Type |
cyboxCommon: StringObjectPropertyType |
0..1 |
The Device_Type property specifies the type of the device. |
|
Manufacturer |
cyboxCommon: StringObjectPropertyType |
0..1 |
The Manufacturer property specifies the manufacturer of the device. |
|
Model |
cyboxCommon: StringObjectPropertyType |
0..1 |
The Model property specifies the model identifier of the device. |
|
Serial_Number |
cyboxCommon: StringObjectPropertyType |
0..1 |
The Serial_Number property specifies the serial number of the Device. |
|
Firmware_Version |
cyboxCommon: StringObjectPropertyType |
0..1 |
The Firmware_Version property specifies the version of the firmware running on the device. |
|
System_Details |
cyboxCommon: ObjectPropertiesType |
0..1 |
The System_Details property captures the details of the system that may be present on the device. It uses the abstract ObjectPropertiesType which permits the specification of any Object; however, it is strongly recommended that the System Object or one of its subtypes be used in this context. |
Implementations have discretion over which parts (components, properties, extensions, controlled vocabularies, etc.) of CybOX they implement (e.g., Observable/Object).
[1] Conformant implementations must conform to all normative structural specifications of the UML model or additional normative statements within this document that apply to the portions of CybOX they implement (e.g., implementers of the entire Observable class must conform to all normative structural specifications of the UML model regarding the Observable class or additional normative statements contained in the document that describes the Observable class).
[2] Conformant implementations are free to ignore normative structural specifications of the UML model or additional normative statements within this document that do not apply to the portions of CybOX they implement (e.g., non-implementers of any particular properties of the Observable class are free to ignore all normative structural specifications of the UML model regarding those properties of the Observable class or additional normative statements contained in the document that describes the Observable class).
The conformance section of this document is intentionally broad and attempts to reiterate what already exists in this document.
The following individuals have participated in the creation of this specification and are gratefully acknowledged.
|
Aetna David Crawford AIT Austrian Institute of Technology Roman Fiedler Florian Skopik Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ Bank) Dean Thompson Blue Coat Systems, Inc. Owen Johnson Bret Jordan Century Link Cory Kennedy CIRCL Alexandre Dulaunoy Andras Iklody Raphaël Vinot Citrix Systems Joey Peloquin Dell Will Urbanski Jeff Williams DTCC Dan Brown Gordon Hundley Chris Koutras EMC Robert Griffin Jeff Odom Ravi Sharda Financial Services Information Sharing and Analysis Center (FS-ISAC) David Eilken Chris Ricard Fortinet Inc. Gavin Chow Kenichi Terashita Fujitsu Limited Neil Edwards Frederick Hirsch Ryusuke Masuoka Daisuke Murabayashi Google Inc. Mark Risher Hitachi, Ltd. Kazuo Noguchi Akihito Sawada Masato Terada iboss, Inc. Paul Martini Individual Jerome Athias Peter Brown Elysa Jones Sanjiv Kalkar Bar Lockwood Terry MacDonald Alex Pinto Intel Corporation Tim Casey Kent Landfield JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. Terrence Driscoll David Laurance LookingGlass Allan Thomson Lee Vorthman Mitre Corporation Greg Back Jonathan Baker Sean Barnum Desiree Beck Nicole Gong Jasen Jacobsen Ivan Kirillov Richard Piazza Jon Salwen Charles Schmidt Emmanuelle Vargas-Gonzalez John Wunder National Council of ISACs (NCI) Scott Algeier Denise Anderson Josh Poster NEC Corporation Takahiro Kakumaru North American Energy Standards Board David Darnell Object Management Group Cory Casanave Palo Alto Networks Vishaal Hariprasad Queralt, Inc. John Tolbert Resilient Systems, Inc. Ted Julian Securonix Igor Baikalov Siemens AG Bernd Grobauer Soltra John Anderson Aishwarya Asok Kumar Peter Ayasse Jeff Beekman Michael Butt Cynthia Camacho Aharon Chernin Mark Clancy Brady Cotton Trey Darley Mark Davidson Paul Dion Daniel Dye Robert Hutto Raymond Keckler Ali Khan Chris Kiehl Clayton Long Michael Pepin Natalie Suarez David Waters Benjamin Yates Symantec Corp. Curtis Kostrosky The Boeing Company Crystal Hayes ThreatQuotient, Inc. Ryan Trost U.S. Bank Mark Angel Brad Butts Brian Fay Mona Magathan Yevgen Sautin US Department of Defense (DoD) James Bohling Eoghan Casey Gary Katz Jeffrey Mates VeriSign Robert Coderre Kyle Maxwell Eric Osterweil |
Airbus Group SAS Joerg Eschweiler Marcos Orallo Anomali Ryan Clough Wei Huang Hugh Njemanze Katie Pelusi Aaron Shelmire Jason Trost Bank of America Alexander Foley Center for Internet Security (CIS) Sarah Kelley Check Point Software Technologies Ron Davidson Cisco Systems Syam Appala Ted Bedwell David McGrew Pavan Reddy Omar Santos Jyoti Verma Cyber Threat Intelligence Network, Inc. (CTIN) Doug DePeppe Jane Ginn Ben Othman DHS Office of Cybersecurity and Communications (CS&C) Richard Struse Marlon Taylor EclecticIQ Marko Dragoljevic Joep Gommers Sergey Polzunov Rutger Prins Andrei Sîrghi Raymon van der Velde eSentire, Inc. Jacob Gajek FireEye, Inc. Phillip Boles Pavan Gorakav Anuj Kumar Shyamal Pandya Paul Patrick Scott Shreve Fox-IT Sarah Brown Georgetown University Eric Burger Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) Tomas Sander IBM Peter Allor Eldan Ben-Haim Sandra Hernandez Jason Keirstead John Morris Laura Rusu Ron Williams IID Chris Richardson Integrated Networking Technologies, Inc. Patrick Maroney Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory Karin Marr Julie Modlin Mark Moss Pamela Smith Kaiser Permanente Russell Culpepper Beth Pumo Lumeta Corporation Brandon Hoffman MTG Management Consultants, LLC. James Cabral National Security Agency Mike Boyle Jessica Fitzgerald-McKay New Context Services, Inc. John-Mark Gurney Christian Hunt James Moler Daniel Riedel Andrew Storms OASIS James Bryce Clark Robin Cover Chet Ensign Open Identity Exchange Don Thibeau PhishMe Inc. Josh Larkins Raytheon Company-SAS Daniel Wyschogrod Retail Cyber Intelligence Sharing Center (R-CISC) Brian Engle Semper Fortis Solutions Joseph Brand Splunk Inc. Cedric LeRoux Brian Luger Kathy Wang TELUS Greg Reaume Alan Steer Threat Intelligence Pty Ltd Tyron Miller Andrew van der Stock ThreatConnect, Inc. Wade Baker Cole Iliff Andrew Pendergast Ben Schmoker Jason Spies TruSTAR Technology Chris Roblee United Kingdom Cabinet Office Iain Brown Adam Cooper Mike McLellan Chris O’Brien James Penman Howard Staple Chris Taylor Laurie Thomson Alastair Treharne Julian White Bethany Yates US Department of Homeland Security Evette Maynard-Noel Justin Stekervetz ViaSat, Inc. Lee Chieffalo Wilson Figueroa Andrew May Yaana Technologies, LLC Anthony Rutkowski |
The authors would also like to thank the larger CybOX Community for its input and help in reviewing this document.
|
Revision |
Date |
Editor |
Changes Made |
|
wd01 |
15 December 2015 |
Desiree Beck Trey Darley Ivan Kirillov Rich Piazza |
Initial transfer to OASIS template |