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Its official depth is 754 feet, though a tour boat captain reported recording a depth of 889 feet in 2016. The loch is about 23 miles long and less than 2 miles wide.
So ran the unusual headline in the May 2, 1933, Courier. "Loch Ness has for generations been credited with being the home of a fearsome-looking monster," read the piece that started all the trouble.
The Loch Ness Centre has announced a new two-day hunt for Nessie on August 26-27. Given the right amount of really rare Glenmorangie at day's end, it could be fun.
A view of the Loch Ness Monster, near Inverness, Scotland, April 19, 1934. The photograph, one of two pictures known as the 'surgeon's photographs,' was later exposed as a hoax.
Loch Ness monster hunters release video allegedly capturing possible sighting Hundreds of people gathered in the Scottish Highlands in August in what is considered the largest search for the ...
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 ...
The first Loch Ness Monster sighting of 2025 lasted for minutes and was caught on camera. The photos were later shared with research institutions dedicated to the study of Scotland’s Loch Ness.
National treasure Lorraine spoke to Angus McLean, who is embarking on a UK-wide milk-float tour to deliver Irn-Bru Xtra’s “Nessie Nectar” to doors across the nation.
There have been more than a thousand official sightings of the Loch Ness Monster, the Loch Ness Centre says. Nessie enthusiasts are deploying new tools this weekend to try and prove it's real.
Loch Ness and its marine life have actually been deeply studied by the scientific community for the past half-century — including in a 1976 report from Carl Sagan that suggested multiple ...
Lorraine Kelly had the most mythical encounter of her career as she interviewed the "5th generation Loch Ness Monster milker" behind Irn-Bru’s new limited edition "Nessie Nectar" flavour ...