According to scientists, the hypothesis that a so-called Loch Ness Monster could have existed in the Scottish Highlands may not be as absurd as previously thought.
A plesiosaura prehistoric reptile with a long, slender neckmay have previously been in Loch Ness, a Scottish lake, according to new research from the University of Bath published on July 21 in the journal Cretaceous Research. Based on their discoveries, they say that the legend of the Loch Ness monster might not actually be fictional.
The statement follows the discovery of plesiosaur fossils in a 100 million-year-old river system in Moroccos Sahara Desert, suggesting that the reptiles may have lived in freshwater as well as seawater, contrary to earlier theories.
Similar to concerns about Big Foot, scientists have typically always condemned the idea that the Loch Ness monster might genuinely exist. The debunkers have frequently argued that plesiosaurs, which resemble the supposed creatures popular depiction, could not exist in the freshwater lake because scientists thought they needed a saltwater environment to survive.
However, these new fossils indicate plesiosaurs couldve actually existed where the legend of the Loch Ness Monster lives because they were found in a freshwater river. The paper suggests that plesiosaurs adapted to tolerate freshwater and that many may have spent the majority of their lives in it.