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The Loch Ness Monster

In the summer of 1962, Jimmy Cameron and Dan Macintosh from a boat on Loch Ness, in Scotland. Suddenly, the boat violently, the loch was calm. Then, Mr Cameron saw something to the surface only ten metres from the boat. A small, flat head and a long neck rose from water. It submerged after only seconds, came up again about twenty metres away and then the men saw a V-shaped wave move rapidly up the loch. Their story is not unique. Over hundreds of years, thousands of people mysterious animals which look like dinosaurs in Loch Ness. Loch Ness is thirty-six kilometres and, in places, the depth is over three hundred metres. A lot of soil flows into the loch and visibility under the water is almost zero. Some scientists refuse to believe in the monster. They say enough evidence. believe that thousands of years ago, when soil and rocks blocked both ends of the loch, a group of aquatic dinosaurs called plesiosaurs survived and continued to live in the loch. If this is true, then there must be several Loch Ness Monsters - perhaps as many as thirty. There are some photos of the Loch Ness Monster. The photographer was a man called Frank Searle. He lives at Loch Ness and has looked for the monster the last thirteen years. Every summer, thousands of people visit the loch, and look for Nessie (as most British people call the monster). Most see absolutely nothing, a few see something and one or two photographs of what they see. But still there is no good, close-up photo or any other completely convincing proof of the Loch Ness Monster's (or Monsters') existence.