'Sea monsters' appeared in Alaska

The recently released video shows the image of a moving object on the surface of Alaska, making people think of the famous Loch Ness monster.

>>>Watch video of Loch Ness monster monster in Alaska

Picture 1 of 'Sea monsters' appeared in Alaska
Monster pictures. Photo: Discovery.

The scene was shot by an Alaskan fisherman recorded in 2009, and on Tuesday night, the scene was released to the public on " Hillstranded ", a special new program on Discovery Channel at 10pm.

Some argue that it is the " Cadborosaurus " creature, a reptile or lizard originating from the Cadboro Bay in British Columbia. According to them, the image in the video is a sea snake living in the North Pacific. It is described with a long neck, the head is like a horse's head, the face is large, and a lump is raised from the water.

Paul LeBlond, the head of the Earth and Ocean Sciences department at the University of British Columbia, told Discovery: " I was impressed with the video, although it was recorded in the rain on a precarious boat. but it is very authentic . "

LeBlond is also the author of the book " Cadborosaurus : The Survivor from the Deep," and says that the animal is not the same as the dragon's lizard, but it is related to the carnivorous marine reptile once thought to be great. strains at the end of the Cretaceous period.

" Cadborosaurus " image has been around for a long time. In 1937, a carcass was found in a whale's stomach captured by Naden Harbor whale station on Queen Charlotte Island, an archipelago of British Columbia. But then this animal model disappeared. Many believe that it is not a whale's fetus.

" Cadborosaurus " has traditionally existed only in photographs and through the accounts of witnesses that have not been recognized by science. "The 2009 video added to its authenticity," LeBlond said.

While many believe that " Cadborosaurus " is a gut-shaped shark, or a fish, LeBlond protests that it cannot be a fish due to the way it moves. " It must be a mammal or a reptile, because it oscillates up and down in a vertical field, different from the horizontal variation of the fish."

A new member of " Cadborosaurus " is Andy Hillstrand in the popular TV show "Deadliest Catch" said, he saw a white, large, long-moving stuff in the country.

"We chased it for about 20 minutes. The water spewed out of its head. Certainly not a shark, that big possibility was a giant eel, but eels didn't have humps. I never looked. see anything like that before , "recalls Andy Hillstrand.

"We live in Alaska, so we can investigate Cadborosaurus again in the future," LeBlond said.