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Loch Ness Monster

Loch Ness Monster

The legendary creature who supposedly lives in the muddy waters of Loch Ness, Scotland.

Name:
Loch Ness Monster
Real name:
Aliases:
  • Nessie
Birth date:
None
Gender:
Other
Powers:
  • Agility
  • Berserker Strength
  • Escape Artist
  • Feral
  • Immortal
  • Longevity
  • Stamina
  • Stealth
  • Sub-Mariner
  • Super Strength
  • Unarmed Combat
First issue:
Wonder Comics (1939) #2 The Children's Crusade; The Iron Horse Goes Through.
cover

History

Loch Ness is a deep freshwater loch in the Scottish Highlands, 37 km (23 miles) southwest of Inverness. Saint Columba reportedly met a monster in the loch c. 565. At least according to a 7th century biography of the saint by Adomnán, abbot of Iona. A D. Mackenzie reportedly met the monster in October, 1871 but the account of the meeting was not contemporary. The first modern sighting of the monster took place on 22 July, 1933 when George Spicer and his wife claimed to see it crossing the road in front of their car. In August, 1933, Arthur Grant reported nearly hitting the monster with his motorcycle. Margaret Munro, a maidservant, claimed to have had already observed the monster in June, 1933. However she was the last person giving an account of sighting that year.

No Caption Provided

On 21 April, 1934 a supposed photo of the monster was posted in the "Daily Mail". The picture was reportedly taken Robert Kenneth Wilson, a London gynaecologist on vacation. In 1994, Christian Spurling claimed to have fashioned the sculpture depicted in the photo and that it was a hoax conceived by his father-in-law Marmaduke Wetherell, a big game hunter who had been employed by the newspaper. Wilson had only agreed to act as an intermidiary. While sceptics welcomed the confession, its reliability has been questioned. Wilson, Wetherell and other people supposedly involved in the hoax were all long dead and unable to dispute it.

In 1938, South African tourist G.E. Taylor supposedly filmed the monster. However this film has been privately owned since then and few cryptozoologists and sceptics have been able to see it and assess it. In May, 1943, C.B. Farrel of the Royal Observer Corps, a civil defense organization, claimed to have seen the monster. The first sighting in years. In December, 1954, the sonar of fishing boat "Rival III" a large object keeping pace with the boat at the depth of 146 meters (480 feet) below the surface. In 1960, Tim Dinsdale, aeronautical engineer, supposedly filmed the monster. The film had low resolution and later analysis has offered contradictory opinions by the people examining it.

However it returned the monster to public interest and several depictions of it in fiction have followed. For example Carl Barks depicted the monster in a Donald Duck story in 1960.

Issues

June 1960

October 1961

October 1968

January 1977

February 1977

October 1977

April 1979

January 2001

June 2003

July 2008

February 2009

December 2010

January 2011

December 2011

October 2012

November 2012

December 2012

January 2013

March 2016

March 2017

June 2018

May 2019

June 2019

Volumes

1940

1951

1961

1966

1974

1977

1993

2000

2002

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2015

2018

2019

Friends

Enemies

Teams