Loch Ness Monster Research Paper

450 Words1 Page

The Loch Ness Monster, affectionately called "Nessie," is a mysterious water creature many claim to have seen in the Scotland Loch Ness. It's been described as large, dark and limbless with a humpy body and an elongated neck. Many scientists and relevant experts purport there's no substantial evidence confirming it exists, and they've offered ideas to discount or explain sightings.

Experts emphasize that several sightings have been exposed as hoaxes. One journalist admitted he wrote a false story about seeing the Loch Ness Monster. Alleged Nessie footprints turned out to be a prank; the marks from a stand with hippopotamus-like bases. A zoo education officer mutilated a dead elephant seal to mislead people into thinking it was Nessie. Someone reported finding a fossil, but it was obviously planted.

Swedish naturalist Bengt Sjögren attributes belief in the monster to folklore about ominous water creatures, as the Loch Ness is a frequent story setting. Nessie author Ronald Binns suggests it's human …show more content…

The Greenland shark is common in the vicinity of Scotland. It's 20 feet long, dark and has a tiny fin. It could possibly survive in freshwater like the Ness, using lakes and rivers for food where fish live. Hunter Steve Feltham hypothesized that the "monster" is a giant Wels catfish, while investigator R.T. Gould proposed a long-necked newt. Eels were once suggested because they're common in the Loch Ness, but their wavy movement counters sighting reports. One cryptozoologist suggested an invertebrate, like the bristle-worm. Though bristle-worms circle land, have varied back structure, and can be 9 feet long, most are small. What's thought to be the head and neck of the Loch Ness Monster could be the trunk of a swimming elephant, with the elephant's head and body misconstrued as "humps." Elephants are also large. To place them at the Loch Ness, a paleontologist theorized traveling

More about Loch Ness Monster Research Paper

Open Document