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#152674 12/24/05 01:31 PM
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I'm watching on National Geographic about the Loch-Ness monster (aka Nessy or Ogopogo). They mentioned a couple of times, that if this creature exist, it is believed to be an aquatic dinosaur that has survived to our age. They have, in fact, mentioned the name of that particular dinosaur; but as some of you may know, long words have a way to elude me. I would like to read more about that dinosaur (or what is known about it), does anyone know its name?


And while we're on the issue, are you a Nessy-skeptic or Nessy-believer? while the show isn't over yet, so far they represented so many sane-looking eyewitnesses that it's hard to be sure of anything. Judging from what I've seen so far, I'm still leaning towards Nessy-skeptic... but maybe by the end of the show I'll be coaxed otherwise...

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I think plesiosaur is the word you couldn't quite remember, Logwood.

Where do *I stand on this issue?

Quote:

"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."

--From Hamlet (I, v, 166-167)





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O LORD, how manifold are your works!
in wisdom you have made them all;
the earth is full of your creatures.
Yonder is the great and wide sea
with its living things too many to number,
creatures both small and great.
There move the ships,
and there is that Leviathan,
which you have made for the sport of it.

~Psalm 104:25-27, 1979 BCP

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Logwood Offline OP
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I have no doubt that are extraordinary things science has yet to discover, just like there are also a lot things people blow out of proportions. I'm just talking about this particular thing, just in case you've heard or know about it. No need to get all philosophical on me!

Nice quotes though.

Yes, plesiosaur, that's it! thanks.

Curiosity speaking- did you knew the answer or did you had to search for it?

Last edited by Logwood; 12/24/05 05:50 PM.
#152678 12/24/05 05:53 PM
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Logwood Offline OP
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I just realized Nessy is actually spelled Nessie, just wanted to point it out.

#152679 12/24/05 06:26 PM
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But then, one can believe that there are many animals out there that we have not yet discovered and still purely disbelieve in Nessie.

#152680 12/24/05 06:33 PM
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Yes, I googled it since I couldn't remember the word either. I'll just say that it wouldn't surprise me much if it really was an actual plesiosaur or a hoax. [on the stile-ish, leaning forward and swinging my legs]

Last edited by consuelo; 12/24/05 06:35 PM.
#152681 12/24/05 10:28 PM
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Nessie

Surely, if pleiosaurs they be in Loch Ness, there would have to be more than one. The most famous (and first_ picture of Nessie has been established to be a hoax.


Ceci n'est pas un seing.
#152682 12/24/05 11:06 PM
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From the NOVA site I linked to above:

In 1987, an expedition called Operation Deep Scan used a flotilla of 20 sonar-equipped boats to sweep the loch with a curtain of sound; the operation yielded three underwater targets that could not be explained. In the early 1990s, the BBC's Nicholas Witchell helped organize Project Urquhart, the first extensive study of the loch's biology and geology. Although they weren't looking for monsters, the expedition's sonar operators detected a large, moving underwater target and followed it for several minutes before losing it. And during the 1997 expedition featured in NOVA's Loch Ness film, Rines and his longtime colleague Charles Wyckoff detected yet another puzzling underwater target. According to the expedition's sonar expert, marine biologist Arne Carr, it was a moving target, appeared to be biological in nature, and was about 15 feet long—the size of a small whale.

#152683 01/16/06 05:01 AM
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Quote:

But then, one can believe that there are many animals out there that we have not yet discovered and still purely disbelieve in Nessie.




Just last month (Dec. 2005), a new mammal (probably some sort of civet) was found in Kalimantan. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4501152.stm.

As to a colony (school?) of plesiosaurs inhabiting Loch Ness, how many would you need to ensure a sustainable breeding population?


Bingley
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