The Loch Ness Monster Debate

Loch Ness is the largest body of fresh water in Britain. It's 754 feet deep, 22.5 miles long, and 1-1.5 miles wide. It is said that the loch never freezes, which could account for how the dinosaur survived through the ages. Below 100 feet, a thermocline keeps the temperature of the water at 44 degrees Fahrenheit. There is a large cavern system deep in the lake that could be where Nessie lives and avoids detection.
The Loch Ness Monster has been a popular myth since at least 1933, but there have been reported sitings since as early as 565 by Saint Columbia, who wrote that a beast rose from the loch and attacked a man swimming out to retrieve a boat.
Over the past 4 years, people have debated the monster's existence on a picture I took of a statue at Eccles Dinosaur Park near Ogden Utah of a Plesiosaur on my photo gallery at The Lens Flare. On this page, I ask the question, "Could this dinosaur be the ancestor of the Loch Ness Monster?" People have misinterpreted my question as "Is this the real Nessie?" and hundreds of people have commented.
The picture recently reached 100,000 views and is the first image on The Lens Flare to do so largely due to the fact that it often shows up on the first page of Google's image search for phrases like "Loch Ness Monster" and other variations, and the number of visits to this picture per week has dramatically increased since the show "The Water Horse" hit the big screen putting Nessie back in the spotlight. I invite you to take part in the conversation of Nessie on my picture The Loch Ness Monster's Great Great Granddad.
Labels: dinosaur, loch ness monster, myth, nessie
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