The author of The Eastern Evil
Dinosaurs are one of the most incredible creatures in Earth's history, rising from more than 200 million years ago, dominating the planet for more than 100 million years, and then suddenly disappearing 65 million years ago. The fact that creatures that were once "invincible" would be eliminated has made modern humans feel incredible, so that there are still legends related to dinosaurs, such as the water monster in Loch Ness in Scotland, England, which the locals think may be a plesiosaur.

In the past hundred years, the rumors about the Loch Ness monster have never disappeared, and recently the New York Post reported a strange incident in which a british man named Richard Marvel used a drone to photograph a suspected water monster in the lake while rowing across Loch Ness. The news once again brought the public to loch Ness, so how did Marvel find himself photographing the Loch Ness monster? Does the Loch Ness Monster really exist?
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="4" >how did Marvel discover the Loch Ness Monster? </h1>
According to Marvel, he and his friends were rowing on the southern shore of Lake Nice last month while also operating a drone that inadvertently photographed the anomalous situation on the surface of Loch Ness. At first, Marvel didn't notice anything out of the ordinary on the surface of the water, until he posted the video to the Internet, and one netizen pointed out that there was a huge ripple on the edge of the water in the video, which was different from the ripple on the surrounding lake. At first, Marvel thought it was a visual effect caused by the illumination of light, but the more he looked at it, the more incredible it became.
He noticed that the ripples on the surface of the lake looked bulging, and that a slender outline appeared on the surface of the water, the length of two canoes, which looked like a giant creature. As more and more netizens left messages under Mavor's video to discuss, this incident was gradually known to more people. Most people think that the picture taken by Marvel is not clear and does not explain the problem. There are also some people who agree with Marvell that there are huge creatures under the surface of the water.
Later, Marvel found a picture of the plesiosaur on the Internet, and compared it with the video he took, he found that the outline under the surface of loch Ness was indeed somewhat similar to the outline of the plesiosaur. In fact, this is not the first time that the unproven Loch Ness Monster has been associated with Plesiosaurus, which has been the most frequent in the last century. So when did the Loch Ness Monster start to appear?
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="17" >why did the Loch Ness Monster start to appear? </h1>
According to British folklore, the Loch Ness Monster first appeared in the 6th century AD. Before the 15th century, there was a legend in Scotland that there was a huge monster in Loch Ness, which often came out of the water to devour humans and livestock. Later, some people began to say that they had seen the loch Ness Monster appear, saying that it had a long nose like an elephant on its face and a soft and smooth body. It is also said that it has a long neck and a round head, which appears in the water from time to time, but no history book has ever recorded this content.
In the 1930s, the invention of the camera gave people the opportunity to capture the Loch Ness Monster. The first photographs related to the Loch Ness Monster were taken in 1933, when the British Daily Mail reported that a tourist had found a huge footprint on the shore of Loch Ness, suspected to be the footprint of the monster. But experts at the British Museum of Natural History later overturned this claim, pointing out that the footprint was actually left by a hippopotamus.
In 1960, another photograph of the Loch Ness Monster was taken in Scotland, this time a little clearer than the photograph from more than 20 years ago, but only a section of arched image on the surface of the lake could be seen, and more details of the unknown object could not be seen. In 1987, a campaign called "Operation DeepScan" was launched, which cost £1 million to find the Loch Ness Monster. The crew used sonar to probe Loch Ness and ultimately did not find the Loch Ness Monster, but concluded that the monster was larger than a shark but smaller than a whale.
Although there have been videos and photos related to the Loch Ness Monster, the monster has never appeared in the field of human vision, so the authenticity of the monster is still questioned.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="18" what is the truth behind the Loch Ness monster >? </h1>
Another reason why the Loch Ness Monster has caused great controversy internationally is that scientists have different views on it. A scientist named Freeman believes that the Loch Ness Monster is actually the effect of several 7- and 8-meter-long old eels swimming together. The eels in Loch Ness live to be 100 years old on average, and they have no predators there, so their bodies remain in a state of growth until they die.
Luigi Picardi, a geologist from Italy, through the geological study of Loch Ness, believes that the so-called Loch Ness monster is actually a large number of bubbles released under the water when the earthquake is active, and these bubbles create a mysterious effect on the misty lake surface, making people look at it from a distance as if they have seen a water monster appear.