mercoledì 26 agosto 2009

Aiuto, il mostro di Loch Ness!

Con Google Earth si torna a parlare del famoso mostro di Loch Ness, leggendario abitante del lago omonimo in Scozia. Un utente del noto software dice infatti di aver individuato “l’animale” muoversi sulla superficie dello specchio lacustre: avrebbe analizzato attentamente le immagini riprese dal satellite (ingrandendole), distinguendo una figura del tutto riconducibile al famigerato mostro. Jason Cooke, guardiano dell’area turistica, ha ammesso di essere rimasto molto colpito dai fotogrammi derivanti da Google Earth: “Non potevo credere ai miei occhi – rivela -. La figura che si intravede corrisponde perfettamente alle descrizioni di Nessie”. Chi crede nella storia del mostro di Loch Ness, ritiene che si tratti di un plesiosauro, un rettile acquatico vissuto nel Giurassico e oggi completamente estinto. Adrian Shine, ricercatore del progetto Loch Ness, parla di “immagini intriganti”, ma si riserva di approfondire l’argomento prima di esprimersi a tutti gli effetti. Ecco, in ogni caso, le coordinate da seguire per vedere su Google Earth le immagini originali: latitudine 57°12'52.13” N, longitudine 4°34'14.16” W.

Tempo fa invece un paleotologo scozzese disse semplicemente che il mostro di Loch Ness è un elefante (che ha smarrito la strada). Ecco l'articolo originale pubblicato dal sito della BBC:

Neil Clark, curator of palaeontology at Glasgow University's Hunterian Museum, spent two years researching Nessie. He said they could have been circus elephants, as fairs visiting Inverness would often stop on the banks of Loch Ness to give the animals a rest. The trunk and humps in the water would bear similarities to some of the most famous Nessie photographs. There have been reported sightings of "something" in Loch Ness dating back to the 6th Century and it has grown into one of the world's most enduring myths. Hazy photographs and eyewitness accounts have sprung up over the past 100 years, without offering conclusive evidence that Nessie exists. Dr Clark said most sightings of Nessie could be explained by floating logs or waves. But he is promoting the elephant theory because his research showed circuses were a common occurrence in the area, particularly from the early 1930s. "The circuses used to take the road up to Inverness and allow their animals to have a rest, swim about in the loch and refresh themselves," he said. "It's quite possible that the people around Loch Ness saw some of these animals. "When their elephants were allowed to swim in the loch, only the trunk and two humps could be seen - the first hump being the top of the head and the second being the back of the animal. "The elephant theory would not explain some of the later sightings. I don't know when the last circus to Inverness was, but I'm presuming there were some after 1933." Asked whether he believed in the Loch Ness monster, Dr Clark said: "I do believe there is something alive in Loch Ness." Dr Clark's findings are published in the Open University Geological Society journal this month.

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