presence or absence monster of loch ness (Scotland) has been running rivers of ink for almost a century. But now, This question is about to be answeredAt the end of August, the largest search operation in the last fifty years will be carried out.
The research is supported by the Loch Ness Center in Drumnadrochit and a research team called Loch Ness Exploration, which has firmly joined forces. if there really is anything, determine what is under the waters of this lake except that everyone knows.
During operation, equipped with drones infrared cameras to fly over the lake and a hydrophone to detect unusual underwater sounds. It is also planned to use a diver. to go to the bottom.
Organizers have invited volunteers to join the project, who will be tasked with scanning the lake’s surface from the mainland with binoculars and looking for any strange ghosts.
The operation is scheduled to take place on August 26 and 27.anyone. It’s the largest search for the beast since the Loch Ness Bureau of Investigation searched the bay in 1972.
Alan McKenna, of Loch Ness Exploration, said in a statement reported by the BBC: “We hope to inspire the next generation of Loch Ness enthusiasts and by joining this project they will have a real opportunity to personally contribute to this fascinating mystery that has captivated so far.” many people from all over the world”.
Paul Nixon, general manager of the Loch Ness Center, noted that this project will use technology that has not been used before.
A legend with almost 100 years of history
Since the 1930s, speculation about the ‘Loch Ness monster’ has given rise to a wide variety of and sometimes even exaggerated hypotheses. In any case, The legend, at least, served the development of a large tourism industry in the region.
In 2019, scientists claim that the creatures observed by many references could be giant eels. New Zealand researchers tried to catalog all living species in the lake by extracting DNA from water samples, but upon analysis, scientists ruled out the existence of large animals this can be compared to the so-called monster of the lake.
in April 1933, Aldie Mackay, the area’s hotel manager, said he saw a whale-like creature and the lake water “cascading and turbulent.”
The local Inverness Courier newspaper reported on the sighting, and then-editor Evan Barron started the modern Nessie myth by suggesting that the monster be described as a “monster.”
In an interview years later, Ms. Mackay said: had seen something “black, wet, spilling water” move in circles. She described him as a “monster”.
Regardless, the new research latest technological developmentsand with the participation of scientists from all over the world, it can definitively unravel what for many is now nothing more than a pure myth, devoid of any scientific evidence.
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