all about the loch ness monster what when how who where?

evidence, merchandise, geography, werd it come from, is it a myth or not, what is it ( animal wise)

Everything you’re looking to find could have been done on a search quicker than the time it took you to post this here.

9 Responses to “all about the loch ness monster what when how who where?”

  1. Everything you’re looking to find could have been done on a search quicker than the time it took you to post this here.
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  2. there can’t be one because there would have to be more than one and they would have to breed like crazy
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  3. grandmasterflash on February 9th, 2010 at 12:32 am

    The loch ness monster is a large swan
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  4. Lochness monster is an extinct reptile Dinosaur. Those who claimed to see it are addicted to cocaine and has nothing better to do.
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  5. Country: Scotland
    Location: Loch Ness (loch is a scottish name for a lake or river)
    Merchandise would be available locally
    Most likely a myth
    Sea monster (possibly thought of as a monster solely because of its alleged size)
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  6. Lord Bearclaw of Gryphon Woods on February 9th, 2010 at 2:13 am

    No. It is possible for certain species of catfish to grow to enormous proportions, but these are not monsters in the sense of Nessie, for example.

    What people fail to understand is that every living thing on this planet leaves a "footprint". This is defined as any impact on the environment that would not have naturally happened had this creature not been there in the first place.

    First, if Nessie (or any other lake monster, but here I’ll refer to just Nessie) could exist, a single plesiosaur would have died thousands upon thousands of years ago, so this infers that Nessie has to be a family of plesiosaurs, living deep under the Loch in a series of underwater caverns. The problem with this idea is that in order to maintain species viability, there must be many, many, members to insure successful breeding of each successive generation. What are they all eating? Blind cave fish? Each other?
    A single plesiosaur should be able to eat its own weight in fish every week or so. The caverns, if they exist, would be picked clean in hours. Maybe, as some have suggested, there is a large exit into the ocean from these caverns, and the whole colony can "run out for a bite to eat".

    The problem with this, is, like I said, the numbers needed to maintain species viability. If there were that many Nessies, the oceans would be full of them – and one of them would have been spotted or caught, either on film or in a fishing net by one of the large commercial fishing haulers. They just aren’t that smart to avoid detection. Or one of their corpses would have surfaced and we would have a complete skeleton of a modern day dinosaur to study. No such thing has happened.

    Anything less than overkill on species viability would not have allowed a species of dinosaur to have existed all these thousands upon thousands of years since the extinction level event that wiped them out.

    Back in the Fifties there was a movie or documentary made on the Loch Ness Monster, filmed on the Loch itself, and they had a rubber "Nessie" made for the shoot, large and durable. It sank halfway through filming and was never recovered, but it was engineered to float when air bladders inside were filled. It is entirely possible this contraption accounts for a lot of the sightings, as those bladders could be filling with gases from biodegrading plant material that has found its way into the mockup, and being pushed around by the currents only to sink again when the gases escape.
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  7. Ancient Greece found death to be inevitable, and therefore he is not represented as purely evil. He is often portrayed as a bearded and winged man, but has also been portrayed as a young boy. Death, or Thanatos is the counterpart of life; death being represented as male, and life as female. He is the twin brother of Hypnos, the god of sleep. He is typically shown with his brother, and is represented as being just and gentle. His job is to escort the deceased to the underworld Hades. He then hands the dead over to Charon (who by some accounts looks like the modern western interpretation of the Grim Reaper, having a skeletal body and black cloak), who mans the boat which carries them over the river Styx, which separates the land of the living from the land of the dead. It was believed that if the ferryman did not receive some sort of payment, the soul would not be delivered to the underworld, and left by the riverside for eternity. Thanatos’ sisters, the Keres were the spirits of violent death. They were associated with deaths from battle, disease, accident, and murder. They were portrayed as evil, often feeding on the blood of the body after the soul had been escorted to Hades. They had fangs, talons, and would be dressed in bloody garments.
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  8. Total myth… It is used to attract tourists to the area.

    GoogleVideo a show called "MonsterQuest" from the History Channel. It should answer your questions.
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  9. its awesome
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