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The big mystery solved? Professor claims he knows who the monster Meloch Ness is - Walla! Tourism

2021-01-31T22:43:45.913Z


An 89-year-old American professor who has been following Nessie's story for more than 60 years claims to have come to the conclusion as to who is the mysterious production that has fascinated Scotland for some 1,500 years and refutes the claim that it is a dinosaur. And also: the peak year of monster sightings


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The big mystery solved?

A professor claims that he knows who the monster Meloch Ness is

An 89-year-old American professor who has been following Nessie's story for more than 60 years claims to have come to the conclusion as to who is the mysterious production that has fascinated Scotland for some 1,500 years and refutes the claim that it is a dinosaur.

And also: the peak year of monster sightings

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  • Loch Ness

  • The Loch Ness Monster

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Monday, 01 February 2021, 23:48

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Documentation of the monster Maloch Ness (YouTube)

A scientist claims to have solved one of the greatest mysteries in the history of Britain and the world, and determined that the creature known as the King of a Miracle Monster is in fact an "ancient species of sea turtle".

Professor Henry Bauer's study claims that 'Nessie' is a type of unidentified sea turtle that was probably caught in the lake water when they rose to great heights at the end of the last ice age.



The 89-year-old Professor Bauer, a professor of chemistry and science in retirement from the Virginia Polytechnic, said: "The most popular idea is that the monster Ness has some connection to Plasiosaurus (a marine reptile that became extinct about 66 million years ago). But that fact is inconsistent with observations. On the other hand, everything indicates that the monster Maloch Ness is actually one of many species of sea creatures associated with turtles, a species that can breathe in the air but can also spend a long time in deep water, rise to the surface, move quickly in water and survive in water. "The" cold "has not yet been discovered, but can be defined as one of many sea turtles that live in different niches of the ocean."

More on the same topic

Thanks to the corona, the clearest picture ever of the "Monster of the Ness Monster" was found.

To the full article

More on this topic:

  • New research will reveal: The monster Meloch Ness - a true story

  • Investigators: We have documentation that conclusively proves what the "Monster of a Miracle Monster" is

  • Fear in Scotland: Has the monster King Ness passed away?

  • New drivers - what is important to know before getting on the road?

First viewed in 565 and 3 times since the beginning of 2021

Professor Bauer's work, published in a professional magazine, is the last part so far in the pursuit of 'Nessie'.

One of the legends mythologies of the largest of Scotland, the legend of the Loch Ness Monster brings $ 52 million annually to the economy of Scotland, when hundreds of thousands of visitors come to the area, hoping to spot the monster in action - income, of course, has been severely affected annually host ..



the first time we've heard in modern times, the Loch Ness Monster was in 1933 In an article in the Inverness Quarry about a local couple who saw, he said, "a huge animal rolling and dipping in a lake."

The stories about the monster began as early as 565 AD.

In a book that tells the story of the life of St. Columba, it is told how he saved the life of Pickett (an ancient Scot) from the mouth of a monster on Lake Ness.

Reports of the existence of the monster in the lake have continued to arrive over the years.

According to the website "Legend of Nessi", the center of much information about the existence of the monster, it was claimed that it was first observed (allegedly, yes?) As early as October 1871. In 1933 a story was published in the British newspaper "Inverness Courier" about a local couple. "A huge animal rolls and dips in the lake."

The report became a journalistic sensation and the London newspapers sent many reporters to the lake in an attempt to get a picture of the "monster".

One circus even offered a prize of £ 20,000 to anyone who found it. Since then, there have been further reports from locals and tourists, about a monster occasionally peeking out of the lake. The fact that the lake is particularly deep (226 meters) contributed to the mystery. There was even photographic evidence of the monster's existence, taken by a London doctor named Robert Wilson. He took two, not very clear pictures, which were published in the Daily Mail and served for about 60 years as proof of its existence. It was only in 1993 that the monster Wilson took was made.



Even

a sample of a submarine toy and wood pulp.Even

after the scam was discovered, Nessie continued to stir the imagination.Many researchers took the subject very seriously, conducted geological research and used sonar and advanced diving equipment to find evidence for the monster's existence on the lake.In 2007 a British gambling agency offered a prize In the amount of £ 1 million for the person who will photograph the monster Maloch Ness.

No one has won the award so far.



Professor Bauer for his part said he was sure the monster was real: "Tim Dinsdale's 1960 video is clear proof, but 26 years later, as a lake watcher, I was part of the ships searching through sonar for Nessie and everything points to the existence of a creature who spends most of his time at the bottom of the lake. "No findings support the claim that this is a type of dinosaur."

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In 2020 alone, there were 12 cases in which people claimed to have seen the monster, which is considered a record year in observations but three observations of the Loch Ness monster have been recorded this year, all at least claims the ardent fan of the mythical monster, Ewan O'Feudgain, who told British SUN After it was first spotted this year on January 11, he saw it (and photographed it) twice more through webcams that regularly monitor the lake and broadcast images from there - with all observations recorded in the official observation database.

Yes.

There is such a thing.

It's called The Official Loch Ness Monster Sightings Register, in which O'Foodgain, who observed the fortification for 20 minutes, recorded and even managed to spot two of the four fins he was convinced he had - and even claimed they could be seen in the footage.

This is the monster's first sighting this year

So what is really there in the lake of Loch Ness?

There are many scientific explanations for what many people see as a monster in a lake: underground currents that can bounce logs over the water in a way that can resemble a large animal, groups of otters, large sturgeon and more. A recent DNA study of the lake's water found a high concentration of eel urine in them, which raised the implicit hypothesis that these are some eels that have lived there for centuries, but despite many efforts to discover Nessie, she has not yet been located, and may still be swimming in the depths of the lake. . Or not, of course.



The latest theory about the monster's original story was published in 2015 by Professor Gareth Williams, a professor at the University of Bristol and a well-known historian, who argued that it was a "myth invented by Scottish businessmen who were concerned about the country's tourism crisis in the 1930s. ". Williams claims in a book he published on the subject that the legend named Nessie was invented in general in a London pub in the area of ​​Trafalgar Square. He wrote that a group of hotel owners in Scotland had gathered to find a solution to the meager tourist market, and thought of an idea: to claim that one of the local lakes had a monster animal, which would attract many tourists to the country. And how right they were. According to various estimates, tens of millions of pounds sterling went into the state coffers - only from tourists who came to Loch Ness Lake to look for Nessi themselves.



Williams claims that those Scottish businessmen hired a young British man named Di. G. Grathy to spread the story in English pubs, with the aim of attracting tourists to the country. Professor Trust in the book actually claims that a few liters of beer are what helped the story become one of the great stories of modern times.

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Source: walla

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