Lake Ness monster is a circus elephant?
According to the Times, on Monday, March 6, 2006, a Scottish paleontologist after two years of research believed that the legendary monster of Lake Ness was actually just a circus elephant swimming.
When he discovered that there were a number of circus troupes that stopped at Lake Ness's shore to nurture the animals, Neil Clark argued that the trunk and upper back of the group of thick-skinned animals, the only part of the body, emerged. When they shower, it can easily be mistaken for a monster.
No one has ever proved to have seen Nessie, a water dragon that has appeared in legends since the seventeenth century. However, Nessie's appearances are more regular (four times in 2005) and there have also been many tricks involving this topic.
Neil Clark, the manager of the Glasgow Museum, published his conclusions in the Open Society Geological Society Journal, published in March 2006.
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