An intriguing new theory on Nessie, a telemarketer who sought sinister revenge on a man who yelled at him over the phone, and a group of people who made an ill-advised late-night trip to Stonehenge are among the strange and unusual stories to cross our desk this past week.
An intriguing new theory on Nessie, a telemarketer who sought sinister revenge on a man who yelled at him over the phone, and a group of people who made an ill-advised late-night trip to Stonehenge are among the strange and unusual stories to cross our desk this past week.
An intriguing new theory on Nessie, a telemarketer who sought sinister revenge on a man who yelled at him over the phone, and a group of people who made an ill-advised late-night trip to Stonehenge are among the strange and unusual stories to cross our desk this past week.
By Tim Binnall
Jan 22, 2021
An intriguing new theory on Nessie, a telemarketer who sought sinister revenge on a man who yelled at him over the phone, and a group of people who made an ill-advised late-night trip to Stonehenge are among the strange and unusual stories to cross our desk this past week.
A pair of iconic cryptids found their way into the news this past week by way of some rather unusual stories. First, a scientist who has studied the Loch Ness Monster for decades put forward an intriguing theory that the creature is neither a plesiosaur nor a giant eel and, instead, is an ancient turtle that got stuck in the famed Scottish lake at the close of the Ice Age. Meanwhile, in Oklahoma, a lawmaker introduced a bizarre bill that called for the establishment of a Bigfoot hunting season in the state.
An intriguing new theory on Nessie, a telemarketer who sought sinister revenge on a man who yelled at him over the phone, and a group of people who made an ill-advised late-night trip to Stonehenge are among the strange and unusual stories to cross our desk this past week.