CFLarsen said:
I got one word for you, Steve: Psychics.
Two words "paranormal research"
CFLarsen said:
I got one word for you, Steve: Psychics.
Ed said:I love the concept of big hidden things in the deep.
SteveGrenard said:One can't defend the claims of any large, unknown aquatic reptile such as a pleiosaur surviving in Loch Ness, Lake Champlain or anywhere else unless or until we have the specimen in captivity. Photos and sightings to date can be explained away by natural means or fakery such as this taxidermied crocodile curio.
When I see it, all of it, captured dead or alive, then I'll believe it. This was the case with the giant/colossal squid, with the coelacanth and other animals previously reported but unverified by science.

By pure coincidence I was half-listening to the radio last night and heard the statement that the Nessie idea is thought to have been begun by a circus owner (someone wellknown, he was named) who was performing in the area, and watched one of his elephants having a swim/wallow in the loch.I don't know how the Loch Ness thing got started, and I'd be surprised if many living there "buy it", except for the tourist industry.
Beautiful!
Sounds highly plausible.The Sun's graphic is quite convincing.Thoughts?
So where does that leave Nellie now?
There's no reason why a bit of invention inspired by a bathing elephant couldn't have built on the earlier each uisge stories.
Well ... supposedly.Well... there has been supposedly a monster in Loch Ness for many hundreds of years so a 1930s elephant wouldn't cut it.
Well ... supposedly.
Are you thinking of St Columba?
[swiki]Loch Ness Monster[/swiki]
There's no reason why a bit of invention inspired by a bathing elephant couldn't have built on the earlier each uisge stories.
Rolfe.
Good article, but ironically a more thorough sceptical account of Columba's alleged sighting is given at gospelcom.net (confusingly).Well ... supposedly.
Are you thinking of St Columba?
[swiki]Loch Ness Monster[/swiki]