The new video is not necessarily the Loch Ness monster

Gordon Holmes described the animal as a strip of black and about 13 meters long. However, his video footage recorded at the end of May did not show its color or size. It is simply something moving in the water, leaving a long trail behind. The size and distance are difficult to determine, unless it is a nearby object of the size known as a ship or a buoy.

Although it has become international news, the Holmes video is just the latest of the many " evidence " given earlier. In fact, there is no shortage of videos about "mysterious objects " moving in lakes around the world. The problem is often they are very similar to certain natural phenomena or known organisms. Similarly, there are many fish and animals around Loch Ness that can create images on Holmes' video.

The only reason someone claims this video is a monster is because it takes place in Loch Ness, and on other lakes, that "mysterious object" can be deduced as a common animal.

Picture 1 of The new video is not necessarily the Loch Ness monster

Loch Ness Lake.(Photo: LiveScience)

Maybe Holmes (like many tourists visiting Loch Ness) is hoping and waiting to see this mysterious creature, and therefore misconception that is what he sees. As researcher Loren Coleman commented on Cryptomundo - a mysterious organism's web site, Gordon Holmes's credibility is not crystal clear: he has repeatedly affirmed mysterious phenomena, and he has selling self-published books and DVDs about images that he claims are proof of the existence of fiction.

Loch Ness has been studied many times over 70 years, with everything like submarines, divers and underwater cameras. In 2003, a group from the BBC scoured the lake with 600 ultrasonic positioning beams and separate satellite navigation devices, but did not find the monster.

T. An