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Loch
Ness
Nessie's
home, Loch Ness, is as well known as she is. Its surface is second
in size among Scottish lochs to Loch Lomond. In volume, though,
it is the largest freshwater lake in Britain. Loch Ness lies in
the Great Glen, a fault believed to have been formed by a rift
some 300 to 400 million (or as much as 700 million) years ago.
The fault cuts across northern Scotland from the north-east (the
North Sea) to the south-west (the Atlantic). As much as 25,000
years ago, glaciers created the three land-locked lakes--Ness,
Oich, and Lochy--which extend across the highlands within the
Great Glen.
The
surroundings are spectacular. Loch Ness is a moody lake, subject
to quick change. One moment it is placid, the next it is abruptly
beset by wind and wave. Mountains separated by deep glens rise
from the shore-lines along much of the loch. A ribbon of a road,
the A82, winds its way along the north-western shore, going north,
passing Urquhart Castle after detouring at Drumnadrochit.
Nessie's
history goes back a long way; at least to the mid-6th century
AD when St. Columba , founder of the first Christian monastery
in Scotland, supposedly made the first sighting. It is said that
on his way to visit the king of the northern Picts near Inverness
he encountered the loch's water monster, a fact attested to by
his biographer, a later abbot of Iona named Adamnan.
There
were no verified reports of sightings until 1933, although in
the intervening centuries sporadic stories circulated of a gigantic
creature lurking in the depths of the loch. A gentlemen I met
in Inverness told me the underwater creature was called a 'kelpie'
(water horse) in Gaelic and that sighting it was considered a
bad omen. It is little wonder that no sightings were reported.
If a farmer in the Highlands chanced to see a kelpie, he was unlikely
to call attention to the fact. Also, until recently, the Highlands
was a remote, barely accessible area and news did not travel quickly.
All
this changed in 1933 when a new road was constructed along the
north-western shore of Loch Ness. Nessie-sighting developed into
a favourite pastime for travellers to the Highlands, as did the
perpetration of hoaxes by celebrity seekers. But in the years
since Nessie leapt suddenly into prominence, many sightings have
been substantiated by reputable individuals: monks, lawyers, scientists,
even Dr. Richard Synge, a Nobel prize-winner.
There
were few serious attempts to locate and identify Loch Ness's 'monster'
in the 1930s. The photographs and films that were purportedly
shot of Nessie were, at best, inconclusive. There is, however,
one famous photograph, taken in 1934 by a London surgeon, Robert
K. Wilson, showing a creature with a long neck and a small head
placidly skimming the surface of the loch. While many scientists
agree that it is an animal, at least one investigator has identified
it as a bird.
Investigation
of Nessie's existence--or non-existence--began in earnest in the
1960s and has continued ever since. A photograph taken in 1951
by Lachlan Stuart, a Forestry Commission employee, shows three
humps appearing on the surface of the turbulent loch. This was
hailed as 'positive evidence' by one researcher and a hoax by
another. A photograph taken in 1955 by P.A. McNab , a bank manager,
reveals a long object or objects travelling near the ruins of
Urquhart Castle's tower. The height of the tower--46 feet--conveys
an idea of the length of the creature swimming nearby. Many researchers
now believe that this photo was, in fact, a fake.
In
1960, Tim Dinsdale, an aeronautical engineer, filmed what appeared
to be a creature swimming across the loch. The film was sent to
the Joint Air Reconnaissance Intelligence Centre of the Royal
Air Force, which concluded that Dinsdale's creature was probably
animate and travelling at 10 miles per hour.
Two
years, later, the Loch Ness Investigation Bureau (LNIB) was created
with the two-fold purpose of researching the possibility of a
large unidentified animate creature in Loch Ness and of collecting
and substantiating other people's sightings. Over the course of
its 10 years of existence, the LNIB amassed a quantity of evidence
indicating Nessie's presence in the loch. One of its most famous
photographs--taken during a joint project with the Boston Academy
of Applied Science, using both sonar and film--revealed what appears
to be the hind quarter, flipper and portion of a tail, of a large
aquatic animal.
In
1975, several years after the publication of the 'flipper photo',
200 scientists, journalists and Members of Parliament gathered
to consider the evidence. Representatives of the Smithsonian Institution,
Harvard University's Museum of Comparative Zoology, Toronto's
Royal Ontario Museum--in fact almost all scientists present--concurred
that a large aquatic animal dwelt in loch Ness. The notable exception
was the British Museum (Museum of Natural History) which, though
it accepted the authenticity of the photographs presented as evidence,
felt that they were insufficient to prove the existence of an
aquatic animal.
More
recently, in October of 1987, a sonar sweep of the loch was undertaken.
Dubbed 'Operation Deepscan', it involved 19 cabin cruisers, which
travelled abreast across the loch, setting up a sonar curtain.
Any target caught in the sound net was tracked. Although Nessie
did not surface during Operation Deepscan, several large targets
were recorded, which could not be explained. In fact, one of the
contacts tracked was larger than anything recorded before at a
similar depth.
It
would be difficult to deny that there is something unusual in
Loch Ness. There have been too many verifiable sightings, photographs
and sonar scans, which support the existence of some sort of animate
object. Still, the nagging questions arise: If there is something
in loch Ness, what sort of creature is it? How did it get there?
Most
verifiable sightings, as well as reliable photographs, seem to
agree more or less that Nessie has a long neck, small head, large
diamond-shaped flippers, and a powerful tail. Most estimates of
her length range from 15 to 50 feet. The most frequently espoused
hypothesis is that Nessie is a large marine reptile, possibly
a plesiosaur, which supposedly became extinct 70 million years
ago. The theory is not as fantastic as it may first appear. A
coelacanth, a species of fish once thought to have become extinct
70 million years ago, was caught near Madagascar in 1938.
One
explanation for the presence of an unusual creature in Loch Ness
is that Nessie--or perhaps several Nessies--might have strayed
into the loch at the end of the last Ice Age, 10,000 to 12,000
years ago. Loch Ness was not then land-locked, but was an arm
of the North Sea. When the ice melted, the land rose, creating
an enclosed lake, and possibly cutting off the large aquatic creatures
from the open sea.
Clear
underwater photos of the loch are nearly impossible due to the
presence of peat that is carried into the loch from the rivers
and mountain burns. the peat remains suspended in the water, making
it murky beyond the top 50 feet. This is why the 'flipper photos'
are so significant. It also explains the necessity for using sonar.
Another obstacle to positively confirming, or refuting, the monster's
existence is the loch's immense size--about 20 to 25 miles long,
a mile and a half wide, and at least 700 feet deep (some say 970
feet). Even Operation Deepscan with its cruisers and backup boats
covered only 60 per cent of the loch.
Do
I believe in Nessie? Well, being a person who loves Scotland -
I have to believe in Nessie.
If
you would like to visit Loch Ness as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
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