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The infamous Loch Ness monster often appears, according to legend, accompanied by Earth tremors and swirling bubbles from the Scottish lake of the same name. However, at least one researcher believes the shaking ground and bubbles aren't signs of a monster but rather an active fault underlying Loch Ness and other nearby lakes.
Italian geologist Luigi Piccardi credits the Great Glen fault system for reported sightings of the legendary beast, Scientific American reports.
Read on...
Loch
Ness Monster Resurfaces in Scientific Debate E! Online The debate over whether the Loch Ness monster exists has resurfaced online, with the reports of Italian scientist Luigi Piccardi being called into question more than a decade after he made them. During the 2001 Earth Systems Processes meeting in ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster 'explained' The West Australian The legend of the Loch Ness Monster has persevered for more than 200 years. But could tales of a prehistoric sea creature located in a deep Scottish body of water be explained by science? That's the source of a new theory, which speculates that the ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster Video, Photo Sightings Due to Fault Beneath Loch Ness
... Christian Post Italian geologist Luigi Piccardi believes that the famous Loch Ness monster always appears around the same time as Earth tremors, and he has highlighted that swirling bubbles are often associated with sightings. He believes that these phenomena happen ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness monster mystery solved? The Daily Telegraph AN ITALIAN geologist claims to have busted the myth of the Loch Ness monster. Dr Luigi Piccardi believes the sightings of the ancient monster can be attributed to geological forces. He says the shaking ground and bubbles that have been described in ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster Is Not Real: Geologist Luigi Piccardi Claims It's Just
'Bubbles' Latin Times (PHOTO CREDIT: Keystone/Getty Images) A view of the Loch Ness Monster, near Inverness, Scotland, April 19, 1934. The photograph, one of two pictures known as the 'surgeon's photographs,' was allegedly taken by Colonel Robert Kenneth Wilson, though ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness monster mystery solved? Nessie a geological phenomenon DigitalJournal.com Piccardi argues that historical descriptions and sightings of the Loch Ness monster have been linked with seismic activity along the "very large and very active" Glen fault system which runs beneath the Scottish Loch. He said that activity along the ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster Legend Sightings And Photos Explained: Active Fault And
... KpopStarz For even more evidence, Piccardi claims that the reported Loch Ness monster sightings coincided with periods of seismic activity over the years. "We know that this was a period (1920-1930) with increased activity of the fault. In reality, people have ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster 'Evidence' Explained by Science Paw Nation The legend of the Loch Ness monster has captured the imaginations of cryptozoologists since the 1930s, when Kenneth Wilson's famous photograph was claimed to depict the sea monster peeking its head above the surface of the lake. Of course, the ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster Mystery Explained by Seismic Activity: Reports The Epoch Times The Loch Ness monster mystery could be the result of an active fault line underlying the Loch Ness in Scotland, a researcher said this week. Italian geologist Luigi Piccardi said that the Great Glen fault system was the cause of sightings of the ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster Explained: Scientists Find Truth Behind Mysterious Sightings
... iScienceTimes.com Many are familiar with the Loch Ness Monster myth -- an ancient sea monster lurks beneath the surface of Scotland's Loch Ness. In fact, legend even claims that the appearance of the Loch Ness monster is often accompanied by alarming tremors that shake ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness monster debunked? Geologist blames fault line Zap2it.com (blog) July 3, 2013 12:58 PM ET. Follow @ChrisHayner on Twitter | Google+ Google. loch-ness-monster.jpg. With sightings as early as the year 565, has the mystery of the Loch Ness monster finally been solved? If an Italian geologist is to be believed, yes it has. See all stories on this topic » |
No
Proven Scientific Evidence Loch Ness Monster Exists GroundReport I heard a report on Fox News today that made me have a sigh of relief, I'd heard most of my life about a monster called the “Loch Ness” monster being spotted in lakes around Scotland and it caused my skin to crawl every time I would hear it. I remember ... See all stories on this topic » |
Loch
Ness Monster Proven Fake By Some Weirdo 'Scientists' (VIDEO) The Stir loch ness monster Haters gon' hate, you know? Some know-it-all "scientists" are claiming that the Loch Ness monster isn't some enormous, mystical, unimaginably elusive creature living in the Scottish lake of the same name and are insisting that the ... See all stories on this topic » |
Researchers
Believe that They have Uncovered the Mystery Behind the Loch
... Design & Trend He also said that the Loch Ness Monster sightings were occurring at the same time as seismic activity, saying, ""We know that this was a period [1920-1930] with increased activity of the fault. In reality, people have seen the effects of the ... See all stories on this topic » |
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