An unmanned submarine accidentally uncovered an underwater camera that is believed to have been set up 55 years ago in hopes of capturing a photo of the elusive Loch Ness monster. The United ...
This is a fun one: Researchers have used a database of Loch Ness Monster reports to show how anecdotal evidence can, contrary to the common view among scientists, be mined for usable data.
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 ...
University of Chicago Prof. Roy P. Mackal, who studied monsters and other mythical creatures, holds a model of the Loch Ness monster in this 1980 photo. Sun-Times File Share In 1970, University of ...
1. Loch Ness is VERY deep. In fact, it has more water in it than all of the lakes in England and Wales combined. “You think about how deep that water is, and it's no surprise that people imagine ...
An underwater vehicle known as "Boaty McBoatface" after its naming was left to the public had recovered a long-lost camera from the depths of Loch Ness, aimed at capturing images of the fabled ...
When a Loch Ness Monster story appears at the start of April, it pays to check the date on the article just to avoid red faces. But there should be no hoax with this one published on the last day ...
If anything was going to clear up the mystery of the Loch Ness Monster, it's this. A camera trap, lowered to the bottom of the Loch more than 50 years ago, has been discovered by scientists.
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