/ 31 May 2007

Loch Ness monster caught on film

She’s as much an emblem — and a tourist draw — as tartan, bagpipes and shortbread. And now Nessie’s back.

An amateur scientist has captured what Loch Ness monster watchers say is among the finest footage taken to date of the elusive mythical creature reputed to swim beneath the waters of Scotland’s most mysterious lake.

”I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw this jet-black thing, about 45 feet [15m] long, moving fairly fast in the water,” said Gordon Holmes (55), the lab technician from Shipley, Yorkshire, who took the video this past Saturday.

He said it moved at about 10km/h and kept a fairly straight course. ”My initial thought is it could be a very big eel; they have serpent-like features and they may explain all the sightings in Loch Ness over the years.”

Loch Ness is surrounded by myth and mystery, as it is the largest and deepest inland expanse of water in Britain. About 230m to the bottom, it’s even deeper than the North Sea.

Nessie watcher and marine biologist Adrian Shine of the Loch Ness 2000 centre in Drumnadrochit, on the shores of the lake, viewed the video and hopes to analyse it properly in the coming months.

”I see myself as a sceptical interpreter of what happens in the loch, but I do keep an open mind about these things and there is no doubt this is some of the best footage I have seen,” Shine said.

He said the video is particularly useful because Holmes panned back to get the background shore into the shot. That means it is less likely to be a fake and provides geographical bearings allowing one to calculate how big the creature is and how fast it is traveling.

While many sightings can be attributed to a drop of the local whisky, legends of Scottish monsters date back to one of the founders of the Christian church in Scotland, St Columba, who wrote of them in about 565 AD.

More recently, there have been more than 4 000 purported Nessie sightings since she was first caught on camera by a surgeon on vacation in the 1930s.

Since then, the faithful have speculated whether it is a completely unknown species, a sturgeon — even though they have not been native to Scotland’s waters for many years — or even a last surviving dinosaur.

Shine doubts that last explanation. ”There are a number of possible explanations to the sightings in the loch. It could be some biological creature, it could just be the waves of the loch or it could some psychological phenomenon in as much as we see what we want to see,” he said.

But Nessie isn’t just an icon of the paranormal — she’s also an emblem of Scottish tourism. She has been the muse for cuddly toys and immortalised on T-shirts and posters showing her classic three-humped image.

The Scottish media are sceptical of Nessie stories, but Holmes’s footage is of such good quality that even the normally reticent BBC Scotland aired the video on its main news programme on Tuesday. — Sapa-AP