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Does the Loch Ness Monster really exist? The Mystery of the Loch Ness Monster The Water Monster may be a prank

author:Leisurely sunshine

Loch Ness is one of the most mysterious lakes in the world, and the Loch Ness Monster is one of the most mysterious and fascinating mysteries on earth. There have been many versions of the Loch Ness Monster Mystery, and it has been widely circulated, some people believe that the so-called "Loch Ness Monster" is real, and some people believe that it is just a prank. However, according to the investigation of scientists, the mystery of the Loch Ness Monster has such a surprising truth:

<h1 class= "pgc-h-arrow-right" > the mystery of the Loch Ness monster</h1>

The rumor of the "Loch Ness Monster" first appeared in the 6th century, and later the number of people who claimed to see the lake monster increased, and the more "vivid" it became. The Loch Ness Monster has become the longest-lasting natural mystery in the world. In the past 100 years, witnesses have taken a large number of photos of so-called "lake monsters", and every once in a while, people will come forward and claim, "I saw lake monsters".

Does the Loch Ness Monster really exist? The Mystery of the Loch Ness Monster The Water Monster may be a prank

At the same time, Lake Monster investigators from different research institutions and for different purposes staged another big drama around the "Loch Ness Monster". They have various interpretations of the "lake monster", which all sound more or less reasonable, but none of them can produce convincing evidence that the so-called lake monster does not exist.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > monster may be a prank</h1>

The latest explanation of the "lake monster" comes from Dr Neil Clark, a famous British paleontologist and director of the Hetlein Museum at the University of Glasgow. His public assertion on March 5 was equally striking: the Scottish "Loch Ness Monster" was actually an elephant. After this "conclusion" was reported by many well-known British media, it immediately became the most lively scientific debate in the United Kingdom.

Dr Neil Clarke claimed that Scotland's "Loch Ness Monster" was actually an elephant

Does the Loch Ness Monster really exist? The Mystery of the Loch Ness Monster The Water Monster may be a prank

Dr. Clarke's Elephant says is so appealing because Clarke is a famous paleontologist who is unlikely to joke about his fame and whose conclusions are a little more credible than those of the so-called investigators who roamed the ranks. But more importantly, the paleontologist investigated this mysterious legend for two years, consulting a large number of materials related to the "lake monster", interviewing a large number of witnesses, and adding his many years of scientific research experience, he was very cautious to disclose his research results.

  The Mystery of the Loch Ness Monster: Probably a "masterpiece" deliberately created by a circus owner for promotional purposes

Does the Loch Ness Monster really exist? The Mystery of the Loch Ness Monster The Water Monster may be a prank

  Dr Clarke's research was published this month in the open university journal Geological Society. In this paper, Clark analyzes that the "Loch Ness Monster" may be a "masterpiece" deliberately created by a circus owner for propaganda purposes, and the so-called lake monster is nothing more than a circus elephant playing in the water!

In his investigation, Clark was surprised to find that in 1933, the year the Loch Ness Monster rumors were at their most rumbled, Bertram Mills, the owner of a circus in London, England, caught the Loch Ness Monster with a reward equivalent to today's £20,000, a move that immediately attracted widespread attention around the world. These historical sources also arouse Clark's alarm: for what purpose did an ordinary circus owner offer a reward for capturing loch Ness? Clark pulled mills' family background out of the archives and went through a long period of comparative analysis. Clark believes that the initiator of the lake monster is most likely Mills himself.

Does the Loch Ness Monster really exist? The Mystery of the Loch Ness Monster The Water Monster may be a prank

  But Loch Ness fans are clearly not taking this study to debunk this strange phenomenon seriously, because in the past year alone, some people claimed to have seen the lake monster four times in succession, so they firmly believe that the lake monster does exist. Even Clark himself admits that his elephant theory does not explain the so-called sightings that followed, as the circus by Loch Ness later became largely extinct, but people still claimed to have seen "lake monsters" from time to time. Therefore, we can only say that Dr. Clarke said that the theory that the Scottish "Loch Ness Monster" is actually an elephant" is only an explanation of the phenomenon of the Loch Ness Monster, and cannot represent the whole, and if we want to uncover the mystery of the whole water monster, we need scientists to do further research.

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