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According to a Nessie expert, the Loch Ness Monster is not a giant eel or even a dinosaur, but claims it is instead an ancient and undiscovered sea turtle that got trapped in the Loch Ness when the water receded at the end of the last Ice Age. Retired chemistry and science studies professor Henry Bauer claims that his research on descriptions given on the elusive creature over the years indicates that it is more similar to sea turtles than anything else. He stated that since the creature is barely seen, it would suggest that it spends long amounts of time underwater. In an interview with the ....
Yesterday, I wrote the following words: “Just recently I was asked if the kinds of cryptid creatures seen in the United States are broadly similar to those in the United Kingdom. That’s an interesting question. Notably, yes, they are mainly the same. For example, in the U.K. we have reports of (1) huge, winged things, (2) Bigfoot-type creatures, (3) water-based monsters, and (4) out of place regular animals – just like those encountered by people in the United States. So, having said that I thought I would make this a 4-part article that would address each of these four, very similar, mysterious phenomena in the U.K. – that also exist in the U.S.” Yesterday’s article was on Bigfoot in the U.K.. Today’s is on strange, water-based creatures in the U.K. There’s no doubt at all that the most famous water-based beast in the U.K. is the Loch Ness Monster. Or, more likely, the Loch Ness Monster. The fact is, though, the Nessies are far from being the only unidentifie ....