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Introduction
The most publicised and well known of the lake monsters, Nessie has captured the popular imagination. There are hundreds of sightings on record, which describe a roughly similar creature in and out of the water over a period of 200 years. However, the nature of these sightings has not been adequately resolved, and there are numerous theories to explain and explain away the evidence. The most popular of these being the survival of an aquatic dinosaur, which like most theories has many problems. To other people the answer is more metaphysical or psychological in origin, and to the more sceptical the answer lies in misinterpretation. But, after nearly 70 years of continuous sightings since the road around the loch was built, we are still no nearer an all-encompassing explanation.
Physically the loch is well suited to hiding a large creature, it is the largest fresh water loch in Britain at 22 1/2 miles long and 1/2 a mile broad at its widest. The loch has steep banks, which plunge to a depth of over eight hundred feet. Loch Ness is the largest in a string of lochs along the Great Glen Fault. The others being Loch Linnhe, Lock Oich and Loch Lochy. The Great Glen Fault separates Scotland in to two halves, millions of years ago they were two separate countries. The temperature of the loch stays at a constant value throughout the year, and its oligtrophic waters support a proportion of Salmon, plankton and other fish.
A Brief History of Sightings
One of the first recorded references to the monster harks back to 565 AD, when St Columba is said to have summoned a water monster in the River Ness, and banished it with the word of God. The Celtic Saints, especially in Cornwall, seemed quite fond of banishing and destroying water monsters and dragons, and the imagery may be symbolic of the early struggle between Christianity and Paganism.
During the seventeenth and 18th centuries folklore suggests that a Kelpie, the fearsome water horse of Scottish folklore, haunted the Loch. These were thought to haunt many bodies of water in the Highlands especially in the form of the . The Kelpie was seen in 1771 and 1889, but the well-known description of the monster does not appear until much later.
The first real modern sightings, the ones that started the public interest ball rolling were in 1933. At this time the road around the Loch was constructed, allowing wider public access and views from the roadside over the dull waters.
On April 14th 1933, Mr and Mrs Mackay, who owned an Inn at Drumnadriot, were driving home from Inverness when they spotted a creature in the water near Abriachan. It was about 12 to 15 feet in length, and seemed to roll and plunge in the water; the sighting lasted over a minute.
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 The man who responsible for bringing the Mackay sighting to general public attention, was Alex Campbell, who was the water bailiff working for the Loch Ness Fisheries Board. He passed on the account, and details of his own sightings to the Inverness Courier in May 1933. In his own observations he had described the creature with "….a long tapering neck, about 6 feet long, and a smallish head with a serpentine look about it, and a huge hump behind which I reckoned was about 30 feet long. It was turning its head constantly." He claimed to have seen the monster many more times. There has been some speculation that this sighting was to boost the publicity of the area, and in the months following the paper report, there were many more witnesses of the monster.
One of the most famous sightings produced a photograph that was perceived as evidence of the monster, the so called 'surgeons photo' taken by R. K. Wilson a London surgeon in 1934. The photo has recently been revealed as fake.
In one of the first sighting of the creature out of the water, Arthur Grant was riding his motorbike back to his house in 1934, when he nearly ran into a creature crossing the road. In the light of the moon he could see a long necked animal with a small head, thick body and a long tapering tail. The creature seemed to be moving by the aid of flippers protruding from its body. The creature went back down to the loch, and disappeared into the water and out of his sight.
In April 1960 Tim Dinsdale filmed an object moving in the water, leaving behind it an obvious wake. The object was moving at around 10mph, examination of the film has been inconclusive.
The first real scientific investigation took place in June and July of 1960, and involved students from Oxford and Cambridge Universities. The loch was examined with echo sounding equipment and cameras attached to boats. There were a few minor sightings of 'something', and some of the return data from the echo sounder was ambiguous, but the project did not do anything to solve the mystery.
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