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I wonder, because I heard that sattelite imagery has pretty much found all of the Earth's larger animals.

2007-06-02 10:10:28 · 20 answers · asked by male in the USA 1 in Society & Culture Mythology & Folklore

20 answers

The experts say "no", but I prefer a little romance in my life. With regard to the satellite imagery, I don't think it can pick up what's very, very deep in the water and Loch Ness is very, very deep in places.

Perhaps, Nessie isn't all that huge, anyway, more like the size of a walrus? Would it pick that up?

2007-06-02 10:13:39 · answer #1 · answered by desperatehw 7 · 0 0

Sure it's possible, but I think it's highly improbable.

For one thing, for a marine animal of that size to have existed in Loch Ness in sufficient numbers to maintain the species for thousands of years, a specimen almost surely would have been spotted or caught by now.

Also, a marine animal of that size would almost certainly have to breathe air rather than use gills, so it would have to surface often enough that SOMEONE over the years would have either caught it or gotten definitive evidence of its existence.

Finally, look at some of the pics that allegedly represent "Nessie", particularly the ones that appear to show a reptilian-like head jutting out of the water on an elongated neck.

Do those not look like the dorsal fin of a killer whale? The dorsal fins of orcas often flop over at an angle like that.

2007-06-02 17:20:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If it's possible people actually watch "So you think you can dance?", then the Loch Ness monster being real is certainly believable.

2007-06-04 05:11:43 · answer #3 · answered by J.D the drunk 2 · 2 0

yes bcos ther was a sea animal tht lived with the dinosaurs which is similar to waht 'nessie' is supposd 2 look lyk. so the animal could hav bred and survived for a long time.

anythings possible

2007-06-03 15:07:42 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Anything is possible. God only knows if these creatures live on the Earth. But I kinda think its real and not real. For all we know it could be just some undiscovered giant eel.

2007-06-02 18:44:32 · answer #5 · answered by ESCAPE THE FATE FREAK! 6 · 0 0

yes the lake is deep and they only search small parts at one time so it could be hiding in a different part of the loch

2007-06-03 20:07:34 · answer #6 · answered by slipnotkid 1 · 0 0

I am not sure about it.

I would like to say yes, but there is an issue with what the creature would eat. It would be hard, to find enough food in the lake.

2007-06-02 17:20:03 · answer #7 · answered by Chris Avatar 1 · 0 0

No. The guys who started to whole thing have long since admitted it was a hoax.

Same with the crop circles. And yet people still foolishly continue to believe.

2007-06-02 17:15:49 · answer #8 · answered by John's Secret Identity™ 6 · 0 0

No.

Loch Ness is pretty much barren of fish and aquatic plants.

A creature that big would have nothing to eat, there.

2007-06-02 17:14:10 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Maybe it's properties make it invisible to our technology (it could happen). You don't know it's found most of our large animals, it could've only found like 10 % of the ones we have.

2007-06-02 17:52:43 · answer #10 · answered by Sara K 4 · 0 0

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