An amazing and wonderful thing about people is our imagination. Indeed, it’s one of the qualities that makes us human. Every invention that led to our advanced civilization – cars, planes, TV, ...
Filmmakers have claimed that the Loch Ness monster is an algae-based creature, following DNA research of the water. Investigators collected water samples from the famous Scottish lake's Borlum Bay ...
Scientists say that fossils of small plesiosaurs may prove that the Loch Ness monster could "plausibly" exist. Researchers at the University of Portsmouth claim to have discovered small fossils ...
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There are lots of reasons to believe that the Loch Ness Monster isn’t real, beyond the fact that it is apparently just an incredibly unphotogenic cryptid. But now there is at least one bit of evidence ...
For more than fifty years, Adrian Shine chased the shadowy humps and ripples of Loch Ness in the hope of proving that Scotland's most famous monster was real. His tireless pursuit made him a fixture ...
A swipe at the theory of evolution has found a home in a biology textbook at a Christian school in Louisiana, according to a story in The Scotsman. The textbook, used by the Eternity Christian Academy ...
Researchers identified fossils in a 100-million-year-old Moroccan freshwater system as a marine reptile. Previously, the reptile was thought to have only spent time in saltwater. Some once believed ...
While true believers still search for the famous Loch Ness monster, scientists in Edinburgh, Scotland, say they've found the remains of a real life monster. Josh King has the story (@abridgetotland).
As reported in The Scotsman, this photograph was taken by Ian Bremner, 58, who was driving around the Highlands when he saw something bizarre doing the backstroke in Loch Ness. Bremner, who works at a ...
(THE CONVERSATION) Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com. Is the Loch Ness monster real ...