Loch Ness Monster enthusiasts gathered in Scotland for what organizers said was the biggest search for the mythical beast in five decades. The Loch Ness Centre in Drumnadrochit, Scotland, invited ...
The newly identified prehistoric marine reptile Dearcmhara shawcrossi, a member of a group called ichthyosaurs that swam the world's oceans at the same time that dinosaurs ruled the land, is depicted ...
Hundreds of people gathered in the Scottish Highlands over the weekend in what is considered the largest search for the mythical Loch Ness monster in at least 50 years. An estimated 200 volunteers ...
A giant, ancient, aquatic predator trolling the waters of Scotland -- hmm, why does that sound familiar? According to HowStuffWorks: "The Loch Ness is one of Scotland's largest, deepest, lakes ...
The Loch Ness Centre is on a renewed hunt for "Nessie," in what's being described as the biggest search in more than 50 years. The Scotland-based organization wants the next "generation of monster ...
LOCH NESS, Scotland - The Christmas Day release of the film The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep is likely to spark a storm of renewed interest in the Loch Ness monster. The legendary sea creature, ...
Who has not heard or read about the mysterious creature in Loch Ness, Scotland? Our imaginations had been fired since childhood with stories about this long-necked dragon-like sea serpent supposedly ...
If you believe, you will see. Single-handedly - or should we say, single-finnedly - Nessie, the Loch Ness Monster, has kept a brisk tourist business going in the Scottish Highlands for 80 years. Giant ...
Scotland has Nessie, the Adirondack State Park has Champ … does Hampton Roads have Chessie? For decades, Virginians reported a snake-like “sea monster” swimming in the Chesapeake Bay or its ...
Scientists in Scotland have found a prehistoric behemoth: a previously unknown species of reptile that lived in the oceans during the time of dinosaurs. And before you ask, no, scientists do not ...
The Loch Ness Monster, or Nessie as she is known, may not be a real inhabitant of the modern world, but there is no doubt the shores of Scotland teemed with gigantic sea reptiles 170 million years ago ...