The Sun (Malaysia)

Biggest Loch Ness monster search in decades gets underway

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THE biggest search for the Loch Ness Monster in five decades got underway in the Scottish Highlands last week, as researcher­s and enthusiast­s from around the world braved pelting rain to try to track down the elusive Nessie.

The expedition deployed drones with thermal scanners, boats with infrared cameras, and an underwater hydrophone to try to unravel a mystery that has captivated the world for generation­s.

“There’s not a corner of the globe you can go to where people haven’t heard of Nessie, but it is still one of our biggest questions— what is the Loch Ness Monster?” said Paul Nixon, general manager of the Loch Ness Centre, to AFP.

“I don’t know what it is. All I know is that there is something big in Loch Ness. I have seen sonar scans of objects the size of transit vans underneath the water moving. Tatiana Yeboah, 21, a tourist from France whose visit coincided with the search, said it had been a lifelong dream to visit Loch Ness.

“It could be a myth, it could be real—I like to believe it is something halfway in between,” Yeboah said. Yeboah said she would keep her eyes firmly on the loch during her visit, just to make sure she didn’t miss anything.

The searchers believe the thermal scanners could prove crucial in identifyin­g any strange anomalies in the murky depths.

Hundreds of sightings

The hydrophone will allow the searchers to listen for unusual Nessie-like underwater calls. Stretching 23 miles (36km) and with a maximum depth of 788ft (240m), the freshwater loch is the UK’s largest lake by volume.

Reports of an aquatic monster lurking in Loch Ness date back to ancient times, with stone carvings in the area depicting a mysterious beast with flippers. The earliest written record of the creature dates back to AD 565 in a biography of the Irish monk Saint Columba.

According to the text, the monster attacked a swimmer and was about to strike again when Columba commanded it to retreat. More recently, in May 1933, the local Inverness Courier newspaper reported a couple driving along a newly constructe­d lochside road seeing “a tremendous upheaval” in the water.

There are now more than 1,100 officially recorded Nessie sightings, according to the Loch Ness Centre in Drumnadroc­hit, near Inverness. The monster brings millions of pounds in tourism revenue to the Scottish economy each year.

Prehistori­c reptile

Over the years, scientists and amateur enthusiast­s have tried to find evidence of a large fish, such as a sturgeon, living in the depths of the loch. Some have suggested the monster could be a prehistori­c marine reptile like a plesiosaur.

In 1972, the Loch Ness Investigat­ion Bureau undertook the biggest search to date but returned empty-handed. In 1987, Operation Deepscan deployed sonar equipment across the width of the loch and claimed to have found an “unidentifi­ed object of unusual size and strength”.

In 2018, researcher­s conducted a DNA survey of Loch Ness to determine what organisms live in the waters. No signs of a plesiosaur or other large animal were found, though the results indicated the presence of numerous eels.

 ?? ?? Stretching 36km and with a maximum depth of 240m, the freshwater Loch Ness is the UK’s largest lake by volume.
Stretching 36km and with a maximum depth of 240m, the freshwater Loch Ness is the UK’s largest lake by volume.

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