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"Is that you?" US media: Rediscover the "Loch Ness Monster"! This time in drone footage

Source: World Wide Web

"Loch Ness Monster, are you?" ”

According to the New York Post reported on the 25th, a British outdoor enthusiast Richard Mawall rowed across Lake Ness in Scotland, and when he made a long-distance trip, he may have inadvertently captured the footage of the legendary "Loch Ness Monster" with a drone.

"Is that you?" US media: Rediscover the "Loch Ness Monster"! This time in drone footage

Screenshot of the New York Post report

"The last thing I want to do is say (this) is the Loch Ness Monster," Marvel said, "and I'm the most skeptical." But looking at this, I think yes, it's a little strange here. ”↓

"Is that you?" US media: Rediscover the "Loch Ness Monster"! This time in drone footage

Above is a video taken by Marvel and his party last month while staying overnight in a remote location on the southern shore of Lake Nice. It shows an elongated "creature" silhouette under the surface of the water. Zooming in, zoomed in, the "creature" was almost twice as long as the 14-foot-long canoe on the shore. But the footage was so brief that Marvor, 54, didn't notice it when he posted the video on Sept. 1.

But a week later, a comment by Steve Bates caught Marvel's attention on the footage.

"(Video) At the edge of the water for 4 minutes, the ripples look like the Loch Ness Monster." Bates commented. Marvel responded at the time, "It must be a trick of light or waves." ”

But after taking a closer look at the video, Marvor had a new perspective.

"The more I looked at it, the more I thought, 'Oops.'" Marvel said, "There really isn't anything in this place that can (look like this)." Marvel also said "I had to rewind and fast-forward several times" and recalled that he did not see driftwood or other large objects in the water. Marvel says that's what confuses him, because inland waters don't usually look like tidal debris can be seen on the coast, and even if something is washed up, it's not the size of something.

The report concludes with reports of mysterious monsters in the depths of Loch Ness dating back hundreds of years, with the earliest claim being in the 6th century.

According to the New York Post, The silhouette of the water that Marvol photographed with a drone bears a striking resemblance to that of a plesiosaur , a marine creature from the Mesozoic Era , which has long been associated with the mysterious Loch Ness monster.

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