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Contrary to previous beliefs, the plesiosaur spent time in freshwater. Still, scientists doubt the reptile was the Loch Ness monster.
Some people believe that the mythical Loch Ness Monster is a plesiosaur, a reptile with a small head and a long neck that became extinct some 65.5 million years ago.
This Dinosaur Double for the Loch Ness Monster May Have Lived in Freshwater Too Bones unearthed at a 100 million year old riverbed support the theory that some Plesiosaurs lived in freshwater.
Discovery fuels Loch Ness Monster believers The plesiosaur — an aquatic dinosaur once thought to exclusively reside in saltwater — is now believed to have spent much of its time in freshwater ...
Researchers revealed only 1.5% of people who have claimed to see Nessie over the past 100 years have reported hoops or humps ...
For centuries, the Loch Ness monster has been the subject of folklore, sightings, and squabbles between believers and skeptics. Not to mention more than a few movies, including Nessie & Me (now ...
Contrary to previous beliefs, the plesiosaur spent time in freshwater. Still, scientists doubt the reptile was the Loch Ness monster.
The mythical Loch Ness monster may, in fact, be real. Fossils of plesiosaurs were found in the Morocco portion of the Sahara Desert.
New fossils uncovered in the Sahara Desert show that the plesiosaur, a dinosaur-era sea beast often pegged to be the Loch Ness monster, was able to live in freshwater.
Nessie enthusiasts and volunteers will gather in Scotland this month in an intense high-tech search for the fabled and elusive Loch Ness monster.
Nessie, the legendary monster of Loch Ness, still isn’t “plausible,” even after fossils indicated ancient reptiles called plesiosaurs could live in freshwater.
Existence of a Loch Ness Monster 'Plausible' After Plesiosaur Fossils Identified in the Sahara Desert Scientists said they identified fossils of plesiosaurs in an ancient river system, which may ...