From the carved, standing stones still found in the region around Loch Ness, it is clear the Picts ... often labeled Loch-na-Beistie on old maps. These water-horses, or water-kelpies, are said ...
In 1933, two eye-witness claimed to have seen a prehistoric-like animal in the waters of a Scottish lake. In the following years, the truth would begin to unravel as more people claimed to spot this ...
On 12 November 1933, a man named Hugh Gray may well have started the orginal viral trend when he snapped the first known photograph of a creature lurking in Loch Ness.
The loch, steeped in myths and legends, is immense indeed; stretching about 23 miles and reaching depths of approximately 755 ...
A breakthrough has been made in the ongoing search for the Loch Ness Monster after radar technology detected a “distinct anomaly” during a routine Deepscan cruise on Loch Ness. The Loch Ness ...