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10/11/08, 00:32:18 UTC
Today's News
Nessie no longer a tourism drawgulf-daily-news.com LONDON: Fewer people are reporting sightings of the legendary Loch Ness monster in Scotland, prompting concerns that scepticism about its existence could threaten tourism in the region."It's becoming a potential crisis," said Mikko Takala, 39, a founding member of the Loch Ness Monster Fan Club who runs four webcams on the lake's north shore. Scottish Tourism officials were not immediately available to comment. Loch Ness - the largest and deepest inland expanse of water in Britain - is surrounded by myth and mystery. More than 230m to the bottom, the loch - the Scottish word for lake - is deeper than the North Sea. There have been more than 4,000 purported sightings of a creature - affectionately dubbed 'Nessie' - since a surgeon vacationing at the lake in the 1930s released a photo allegedly capturing the legendary monster on film. Since then, Nessie has been a key tourism draw, bringing an estimated $3million (BD1.134m) a year into the Scottish Highlands, according to The Times. The faithful have speculated whether Nessie 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. In the age of digital cameras, webcams and video recorders, it is surprising that the number of reported sightings is falling. Adrian Shine, 58, a naturalist who has investigated the mystery of the monster for 20 years, thinks the trend shows the world has become more skeptical. "I think we live in a more pragmatic age, and that people are becoming more aware of the sort of illusions that can occur on water," he said. |
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