Do the dark waters of Loch Ness hide monsters?

The Scottish Highlands hide a mystery that is nearly a century old. Since 1933, many people believe they have seen a monster swimming in the waters of Loch Ness.

Dark waters of Loch Ness hide monsters? - 1

On August 26, 200 experts from around the world were mobilized to search for the Loch Ness monster.

Many people have heard of this monster, nicknamed Nessie. It even inspired a number of movies around the world, which were very popular when they were released.

So what are these creatures that are said to lurk at the bottom of Scottish lochs? Is it a survivor from the age of dinosaurs? A giant eel or simply a human hoax?

Loch Ness is the second largest lake in Scotland, it is 3km long and 1.2-3km wide, the deepest water of the lake is up to 272 meters.

In 565, an Irish monk, Saint Columba, is said to have exorcised a “water monster” that was attacking one of his fellow pilgrims.

It was in this context that people mentioned a monster haunting this lake.

“This is a myth similar to the story of a Saint fighting a dragon. It appears in almost every ancient book in Europe,” recalls paleontologist Eric Buffetaut, honorary research director at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS).

However, it would be a millennium before evidence of the monster we know today would appear.

According to Aldie MacKay, the owner of a H๏τel on the north side of Loch Ness, she saw a giant creature shaped like a whale bobbing in the dark water while driving with her husband.

Three months later, the Scottish press published the testimony of George Spicer and his wife, two British tourists who visited Loch Ness, and saw a giant animal more than 8 meters long.

It also had a 3-4 meter long neck similar to an elephant’s trunk. According to them, it crossed the road before crawling through the bushes and finally diving into the lake.

But the real turning point came in 1934, when a pH๏τo of Nessie taken by a doctor in London (England) was revealed to the press. Since then, many scientists have organized searches for this creature, but all have been fruitless.

French writer Sonja Delzongle, author of many detective novels, spent some time conducting her own investigation at Loch Ness.

She believes that the monster may still be observed today in the area around the lake.

In December 1975, British ornithologist Peter Scott (1909-1989) even gave this mysterious creature a scientific name: Nessiteras rhombopteryx (roughly translated: Diamond-finned Ness Monster).

He named it based on a blurry underwater pH๏τo, which was said to have diamond-shaped fins.

Thực hư bức ảnh chụp "quái vật" hồ Loch Ness bơi tới Anh | Vietnam+ (VietnamPlus)

Nessie – a lizard or an eel?

Over the years, countless theories have arisen about the true nature of Nessie.

According to some scientists, Nessie belongs to the extinct plesiosaur species. This is a family of marine reptiles that existed in ancient times and are now extinct.

But this is just the idea of ​​scientists, whether animals that are believed to have been extinct for 66 million years can survive in Loch Ness is still a mystery.

From a scientific perspective, they could not have survived there for more than 10,000 years, and before that, Loch Ness did not exist and the country of Scotland was covered by a thick layer of ice.

Therefore, this survivor probably came from the North Sea upstream of the river that flows into the lake, some species adapted to freshwater.

The truth is that no animal similar or even remotely similar to the Loch Ness Creature has ever been observed in the North Sea. In particular, if it were a reptile, it would have to come to the surface regularly to breathe.

So the hypothesis that this could be a Plesiosaur is eliminated. Alternatively, could it be a shark, a catfish, or even a sturgeon?

According to Sonja Delzongle, food will run out.

“The peat under the lake slows down pH๏τosynthesis and makes it difficult to produce enough living matter. Therefore, the water of Loch Ness cannot be used as a food source for animals weighing more than 300kg,” Delzongle explained.

A 2019 analysis of environmental DNA from Scottish lakes by New Zealand geneticist Neil Gemmell of the University of Otago did not detect any sharks, catfish or sturgeon.

On the other hand, it shows a high density of eels (scientific name: Anguilla anguilla). Another hypothesis is raised, is Nessie just a big eel?

Scientists estimate that the probability of observing large eels measuring nearly 6 meters in length based on data collected from Loch Ness and various lakes in Europe is 1 in 50,000, which is enough to say that Nessie cannot be one of these fish.

Giải mã bí ẩn hồ Loch Ness

Hoax revives legend?

What if this whole story is just fantasy. Maybe humans created that monster from scratch in their imagination.

Especially since the first discoveries of this creature correspond to the period when humans were very interested in dinosaurs.

Eric Buffetaut suggests that this period was nourished by the fantastic imagination of extinct animals from the 1933 film King Kong.

In 1993, Christopher Spurling, who took the pH๏τo believed to be of the Loch Ness monster, admitted that the pH๏τo was created as a trick using a miniature submarine.

He took this pH๏τo, along with his brother-in-law Wilson, who used his name to publish the pH๏τo for credit.

But what about other testimonies and “evidence” regarding Nessie?

“It could be an optical illusion or a misinterpretation of real animals like otters or aquatic birds,” Eric Buffetaut ᴀsserted.

The legend of the monster is not limited to Scotland. There are many stories related to this issue around the world, appearing from Scandinavia, through Canada to the United States and Patagonia. Certainly, whether Nessie is real or not, this creature is by no means isolated.

 

Related Posts

Mystery of the Big Book

Over the years, the pH๏τograph above has appeared on numerous blogs and websites, usually captioned as “man with large book at Prague Castle, 1940s” or “c. 1940s:…

Do you know your ba from your ka? What’s a vizier? How about a cartouche? Our handy glossary of Ancient Egyptian terms will have you speaking like a pharaoh in no time.

How many Ancient Egyptian terms can you spot in this image? The terms we use to describe the religion, history and artifacts of Ancient Egypt are a…

The treasure of 100 tons of rupees worth 34 million pounds is the same amount of money that sank to the bottom of the ocean in 1942 and was recovered at a record depth of 5,150m (17,000ft)

A hoard of silver coins worth £34million that was sunk by the Nazis on board a steamship has been salvaged by a British-led team at a record…

The Egalitarian Labor of Çatalhöyük

Çatalhöyük was an egalitarian society that maintained a fundamental respect for life and labor. Cover pH๏τo: Deer hunt, detail of a wall painting from level III, Çatalhöyük, Turkey…

How to Visit the Ancient Derinkuyu Underground City, Turkey

By Olly Gaspar, full-time traveler for 7 years. I visit every place I write about & share real tips, pH๏τos, & advice from my trips. Explore the ancient…

The Discovery of the Polyxena Sarcophagus: A Window into Ancient Funerary Practices and Mythology

In 1994, archaeologists made an extraordinary find in the Granicus River valley near Biga, in Turkey’s Çanakkale Province, that illuminated aspects of both ancient funerary practices and…