Thursday, December 29, 2011

Loch Ness Monster really exist, just waiting to become discovered

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Together with the amount of sightings from people living on the Monster Headphones loch all there lives and visitors abound its hard to deny that there exists some thing really fascinating and mysterious about Loch Ness no matter whether that be Nessie or not. The only point which can be completed would be to carry on to research the loch and take into account the new sightings and stories and hold a close eye out for the piece of evidence which will one particular day prove the creatures existence.



The sighting of nessie and numerous reports have Cheap Monster Headphones provided an array of photo's and descriptions in the creature via out the years. Quite a few reports have already been published and information created public from as far back as 1933 by locals Mr & Mrs Mackay who spotted the creature while driving down the lochside and in 1934 on April 19th which is one on the most well known nessie sightings to date. This sighting was reported by Robert Kenneth Wilson and it was this sighting that produced the "Surgeons Photo" which is now a widely recognisable photo (shown above).



This photo has had the most impact on the nessie legend over the last 66 many years and brought up many a lot of debates on its authenticity. This photo fueled the idea that the creature in the loch may be a thought to be extinct Plesiosaur. In 1960 Tim Dinsdale is credited with taking what is now considered to be the greatest piece of evidence proving the existence of Nessie. On April Monster Headphones UK 23rd after being on the lake for several days exploring he took a 16MM camera video with the creature moving across the loch and then turning parallel to the far shore and headed down the loch before running out of film. The film was later developed and instantly became proof of some unknown animal inhabiting the loch. This film was further studied by the RAF in 1966 and a conclusion was produced that it was not a surface vessel of anykind but some animate object in Loch Ness.



The debate goes on among scientist as to the question from the loch having enough food to sustain a breading population of such large creatures. Some scientist claim that studies carried out of your loch's food chain show 1-27 tonnes and quite a few say that is simply not enough to feed such a population of creatures. Although other do argue that the large amounts of salmon that migrate into the loch each year along using the large amounts of eels could easily boost these food source numbers and easily sustain a food source over the many years for such creatures.

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