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A camera meant to capture photos of the Loch Ness monster has been recovered in the famed Scottish lake after 55 years.
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.
Boaty McBoatface is one of three Autosub Long Range vehicles being developed and tested to travel under ice to study the world’s polar regions, according to the NOC. The vehicles are able to return to ...
During a test mission, the underwater vehicle named by a poll - discovered the camera system by accident around 180m deep ...
A camera trap deployed by a Loch Ness researcher in 1970 was recently recovered by an autonomous robot. Not only was it still intact—it still had film that could be developed, and the photos ...
In 1970 Professor Roy Mackal, of the Loch Ness Investigation Bureau and the ... camera with an inbuilt flash cube, enabling four pictures to be taken when a bait line was taken,” Adrian Shine ...
An underwater camera from 1970 that had been submerged to capture evidence of the Loch Ness Monster has been discovered by accident. The U.K.'s National Oceanography Centre was conducting a ...
National Oceanography Centre Loch Ness, the infamous freshwater lake in ... camera with an inbuilt flash cube, enabling four pictures to be taken when a bait line was taken,” Shine said in ...
Mr Shine, a member of the Loch Ness Project, said the Instamatic film camera was placed using a bait line, and had taken four pictures during its underwater tenure. Mr Shine said: "It was an ...