It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
In correspondence to the Under Secretary of State at the Scottish Office, Mr Fraser said: "That there is some strange creature in Loch Ness seems now beyond doubt, but that the police have any power to protect it is very doubtful."
He told the minister that a London couple, Peter Kent and Marion Stirling, "are determined to catch the monster dead or alive".
Originally posted by tarifa37
Originally posted by bittersylence
Looks pretty cool, but at the end of the video, you can see the same wave formations a little further back. I was looking forward to seeing something.
Originally posted by zerbot565
its a submarine ?
my two cents
Originally posted by Thain Esh Kelch
Originally posted by zerbot565
its a submarine ?
my two cents
How on earth would a submarine make those waves?
Loch Ness is connected to the open ocean by waterways large enough float medium-sized oceanliners. That is how all those large fish (five-foot salmon and five-foot pike) get into Loch Ness from the open ocean. Five-foot, juvenile giant eels could easily travel in both directions through those same waterways.
It is connected at the southern end by the River Oich and a section of the Caledonian Canal to Loch Oich. At the northern end there is the Bona Narrows which opens out into Loch Dochfour, which feeds the River Ness and a further section of canal to Inverness. It is one of a series of interconnected, murky bodies of water in Scotland; its water visibility is exceptionally low due to a high peat content in the surrounding soil.