A camera trap deployed by a Loch Ness researcher in 1970 was recently recovered by an autonomous robot. Not only was it still ...
Roy P. Mackal — the controversial and colorful University of Chicago scientist whose study of monsters caught the attention ...
The camera, which has been underwater for 55 years, was part of the Loch Ness Investigation Bureau's first attempt at ...
The camera was discovered by chance during a test mission by the UK’s National Oceanography Centre (NOC). Boaty McBoatface ...
An underwater camera set up 55 years ago to try and photograph the Loch Ness Monster has been found by accident by a robot ...
Roy P. Mackal, a University of Chicago scientist, fruitlessly pursued the creature for decades. One of his long-lost underwater cameras has been found.
The National Oceanography Centre revealed the more than half a century old camera became caught in Boaty McBoatface's ...
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks to Adrian Shine of the Loch Ness Project about the discovery of an underwater camera set up 55 years ago to photograph the Loch Ness Monster.
In 1970, a cryptid-obsessed placed several cameras inside plastic trap boxes and sent them down to the depths of Scotland's ...
Autosub Boaty McBoatface has uncovered a little Kodak deployed 55 years ago in an attempt to photograph Nessie ...
When a Loch Ness Monster story appears at the start of April ... scientists from the UK’s National Oceanography Centre were conducting underwater robotics tests in Scotland’s Loch Ness ...
Adrian Shine, who lives near the shores of Loch Ness in Scotland, examines an underwater camera system ... images of the illusive Loch Ness Monster. Shine said the film from the just-retrieved ...