Nessie, The
Loch Ness Monster - CoverUps.com

The Loch Ness Monster, affectionately known as Nessie
by the locals, is said to live in the large Loch Ness Lake in Scotland.
Loch Ness Lake is 22 miles long, about a mile wide, and at it's
deepest point it is 950 feet deep. In a nearly inaccessible, remote
area up until the early 1930's, Loch Ness Lake is part of the Great
Glen which runs like a deep crack clear across Scotland. A small
town, Fort Augustus is located at the southern end of the lake,
and the town of Inverness is located at the northern end of the
lake.
Nessie has been seen in the Lake for a very long time,
it seems. Sightings of Nessie have been reported in print as early
as AD 565 in the manuscript of Life of St. Columba (vol. 6, book
11, chap 27). It seems that a water monster had bitten to death
a man in the Loch Ness Lake. St. Columba made a sign of the cross,
sending the monster away. In 1871 or 1872, a Dr. D. MacKenzie, who
lived in Balnain had seen the Loch Ness monster, described as looking
like an upturned boat, speeding through the water, "wriggling and
churning up the water."
Nessie was first spotted in a modern report in the
20th century in July of 1930. Three young men were fishing in a
boat out on the lake, close to Dores in the southern part of the
lake. Suddenly, 600 yards the water became disturbed as a large
creature just under the surface of the water was swimming toward
them. It turned away about 300 yards from their boat.
On April, 1933, Nessie was seen by Mr. and Mrs. John
Mackay as they traveled along the newly made road from a trip to
Inverness. In the middle of the lake, they saw a large animal disturbing
the water, with two humps which then made a half turn and disappeared
from sight.
In fact, in the very warm summers of 1933-34, Nessie
was seen a lot by people, perhaps due to the heat, which seemed
to make the creature less shy. Throughout the 1940's, 50's, 60's
70's, 80's & 90's, sightings of Nessie continued.
In 1960, Torquil MacLeod had seen a Nessie almost
out of the water. It was between 40 and 60 feet long, with a long
neck, like an elephant's trunk, and had paddles at its front and
back.
Another interesting sighting happened on June 7, 1974
by monster hunter, Frank Serle when approaching a barbed wire fenced
area near Foyers, by the beach front. As he walked by with a woman
from Quebec, they both heard a splashing sound. Peering over the
barbed wire, they saw two baby creatures near the edge of the shoreline.
"They were about two feet long, had dark gray, baby elephant-like
skin, fat bodies, long necks, small heads with protruding eyes,
and snake-like tails. They each had two stump-like appendages on
either side of their bodies." When Serle tried to get by the fence,
they scuttled away in a crab-like fashion back into the lake.
The first pictures of the beast were taken by amateur
photographers. Near Foyers, Hugh Gray was walking on a bluff, fifty
feet above the Loch. When the creature suddenly made an appearance,
rising up out of the water, about 200 yards away, the startled man
took some pictures of the beast, while it was 2 or three feet above
the water. Only one of his pictures came out, and it was a bit blurry
because he let the film sit in the camera for two weeks, having
ambivalent feelings over what he saw. He did catch a vague, grayish
bulk of the creature on film, but this picture was not accepted
as scientific evidence by the scientific community and learned zoologists,
who debunked the existence of this creature for decades.
The most famous photo,
supposedly taken of the creature happened on April 1, 1934 by
a surgeon, about 2 miles north of Invermoriston. He was planning
to take pictures of birds, but was in for a surprise when first
arriving at this spot, so the story goes. He saw the customary
disturbance in the water that is always reported when Nessie makes
an appearance. Using a telephoto lens, he managed to get a clear
head shot of the "serpentine head," a dinosaur-like neck and its
tiny head before it slipped into the lake once more.
At this time, the scientific community declared it
a fake, nothing more than an April fool joke. Many years later,
another Nessie investigator, Tim Dinsdale made a startling discovery.
If one looks closely at the entire picture frame, one can see from
a distance the faint "concentric circle" of rings around the head
of the creature, and if you look closely, you can see another circle
in the background to the creature, indicating that a body is just
below the surface. In 1972, this photo was enhanced by a NASA computer,
and whiskers were seen hanging down from its mouth. However, in
March 1994, it was revealed that the "surgeon's picture" was a practical
joke after all by his son, Ian. Using a toy submarine and a fake
head, a picture of Nessie was taken, creating the mother of all
most successful practical jokes!
The most successful mission to photograph the real
Nessie was the 1975 expedition, sponsored by the Academy of Applied
Science, in cooperation with the Loch Ness Phenomena Investigation
Bureau. One camera with high speed film activated by sonar was placed
on a bottom ledge, 80 ft down in the lake. Another camera, taking
pictures on a preset interval, hung 40 feet down from the boat,
and 40 ft up from the bottom camera, as a back-up system for a 24
hour period; from June 19th to June 20th.
While sonar repeatedly showed large objects near the
bottom camera, something had stirred up the silt on the bottom of
the Loch, blacking out all the pictures. The camera that was forty
feet above this bottom camera, using a took some amazing pictures
in the area of the strobe light beam. Pictures of a portion of a
pinkish body, an upper torso, neck and head of a living animal,
with two stubby appendages are seen. The most startling picture
is a clear image of an underwater dragon looking at the camera,
in half profile, showing its nostrils, an open mouth and several
horn-like projections . After studying several frames of its various
body segments, it is suggested that this curious animal has an overall
length of 20 feet, with an 18 inch neck, a 9 inch long, 5 inch wide
mouth and 6 inch long horns, about 10 inches apart.
Other clear pictures of the animal were taken by Dr.
Robert H. Rines, who led a team of investigators from The Academy
of Applied Science at the Mass. Institute of Technology, in 1972
and 1975. One of his 1972 pictures shows very clearly an 8 foot
long, flipper-like object. A 1975 photograph of his clearly shows
a long-necked creature and its front flipper.
Some of the scientific community, as represented by
Roy Mackal, a director of the Loch Ness Investigation Bureau and
a professor of Biochemistry at the University of Chicago concludes
that "a population of moderate-sized, piscivorous aquatic animals
is inhabiting Loch Ness." In his 1976 book, "The Monsters of Loch
Ness," he thoroughly examines all of the evidence of this unknown
species of animal with a critical eye, and still comes to this conclusion.
Despite this 1976 book, many in the scientific community are still
doubtful about the animals' existence, which has been the traditional
view, despite credible evidence.
There are several theories as to what kind of animal
/ creature, this Nessie may be in reality. One theory claims that
pictures of Nessie are identical to a plesiosaur of the Mesozoic
era, that was supposed to be extinct for more than 70 million years.
Specifically, some scientists think Nessie is an Elasmosaur, a member
of the Plesiosaur family.
The original theory of monster hunter, Ted Holiday,
who spent time from 1962 - 1965 investigating Loch Ness lake, concluded
in his book, The Great Orm of Loch Ness, that the creature was simply
a giant version of the common garden slug, an ancestor of the squid
and octopus. A type of "Tullimonstrum gregarium, a creature with
a shape of a submarine, with a broad tail." Holiday argued that
these creatures were in ages past all over England, and were the
basis for the dragon legends.
He also came up with another more eccentric theory
about the Loch Ness monsters connected to black magic and spells.
Intrigued by the horror of people who see Nessie, and similar creatures
in Ireland lakes, where an animal couldn't possibly survive, he
began to theorize that Nessie-like monsters were merely projections
of evil doers who dabble in the black arts. Toward the end of his
life in the early 1970's he wrote two books on the subject. "The
Goblin Universe" and "The Dragon and the Disc."
Interestingly, later in their investigations, in the
late 1980's, both Tim Dinsdale and Erik Beckjord, a "hunter of unexplained
mysteries" both came to believe that Nessie was a paranormal phenomena.
Erik Beckjord showed a film he took of the creature, that the people
who saw it agreed that the creature was a white, shape-shifting
thing that wasn't a reptile."
Meanwhile, Nessie continues to this day to appear
on the lake, especially when the water is calm, much to the delight
of not only lucky tourists, but also the local people, who depend
on the tourists coming to investigate for monetary income, which
helps the local economy. Nessie is an unknown animal / creature
/ thing, that stimulates the public's imagination to thinking that
there is a element of danger and terror about its character. All
the evidence, with the exception of the paranormal theories, suggests,
however, that Nessie is "a shy, amiable and quite harmless" creature,
that doesn't pose a threat to people.

Something in the lake near Urquhart Castle.

An underwater photo that appears to be a large flipper.
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