I apologise to all cryptozoologists for placing this big and very final nail into cryptids’ coffins but it’s time to find another hobby.' Some alleged snaps of the Loch Ness Monster that do exist ...
A “pellet” found in a plesiosaur fossil unearthed in Kagoshima Prefecture indicates the prehistoric creature regurgitated indigestible parts of its prey, much like modern birds and alligators ...
And the Loch Ness monster is, according to the most popular theory explaining over a thousand sightings since the 19th century, a Jurassic-era plesiosaur ... found there. A cryptid, or ...
Experts spent 16 years working to extract and restore the 3.2m-long (10.5ft) plesiosaur skeleton. It has been nicknamed Raffle after Tracey Barclay's dog who first spotted the vertebrae in rocks ...