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For centuries, the legendary Loch Ness Monster has often been imagined as a creature that swims with extreme vertical ...
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.
McKay’s hotel in Drumnadrochit has been turned into the new $1.8 million Loch Ness Centre and last August hundreds of Nessie fans gathered at the loch for the biggest monster hunt in 50 years.
For hundreds of years, visitors to Scotland's Loch Ness have described seeing a monster that some believe lives in the depths. Now the legend of "Nessie" may have no place to hide.
When the tide comes in on the North Sea, 13 kilometers (8 miles) to the east of Loch Ness, the increased pressure on the seafloor deforms the Earth, a process called ocean tidal loading.
Apparently, the Loch Ness Monster is made of algae, according to DNA samples taken from the waters of Scotland's Borlum Bay, where the deep sea beast supposedly prowls and has been allegedly ...
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 allegedly taken by Colonel Robert Kenneth ...
The Loch Ness & Morar Project has compiled research on Loch Ness — and its monster — dating back decades. Reuters reports the famous black-and-white photo of the monster taken in 1934 was ...
More than a thousand Loch Ness Monster encounters are recorded in an official "Sightings Register." The reports go back as far as A.D. 565, when an Irish saint is said to have saved a man from ...
The scientists’ discovery will be explored in an upcoming special, “Loch Ness Monster: New Evidence,” airing Sunday, Sept. 15, at 8 p.m. on the Travel Channel.