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Loch Ness Investigation Bureau : ウィキペディア英語版
Loch Ness Monster


|Sub_Grouping = Lake monster
|AKA = Nessie, Niseag,
''Nessiteras rhombopteryx''
|Similar_creatures=Champ, Ogopogo, Mokele-mbembe
|Country = Scotland
|Region = Loch Ness
|Grouping = Cryptid
|Habitat = Water
|First_Reported = 565
1802
1933
|Last_Reported= 2014
|Status = Unconfirmed
}}
The Loch Ness Monster is a cryptid that reputedly inhabits Loch Ness, a lake in the Scottish Highlands.
It is similar to other supposed lake monsters in Scotland and elsewhere, though its description varies from one account to the next, with most describing it as large. Popular interest and belief in the creature's existence has varied since it was first brought to the world's attention in 1933. Evidence of its existence is anecdotal, with minimal and much-disputed photographic material and sonar readings.
The most common speculation among believers is that the creature represents a line of long-surviving plesiosaurs. Much of the scientific community regards the Loch Ness Monster as a modern-day myth, and explains sightings as including misidentifications of more mundane objects, outright hoaxes, and wishful thinking.〔Robert Todd Carroll, ''The Skeptic's Dictionary: A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions''. pp. 200–201 (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2003). ISBN 0-471-27242-6〕 Despite this, it remains one of the most famous examples of cryptozoology.
The creature has been affectionately referred to by the nickname Nessie ((スコットランド・ゲール語:Niseag))〔Campbell, Elizabeth Montgomery & David Solomon, ''The Search for Morag'' (Tom Stacey 1972) ISBN 0-85468-093-4, page 28 gives ''an-t-Seileag'', ''an-Niseag'', ''a-Mhorag'' for the monsters of Lochs Shiel, Ness and Morag, adding that they are feminine diminutives〕 since the 1940s.
==Origins==
The term "monster" was reportedly applied for the first time to the creature on 2 May 1933 by Alex Campbell, the water bailiff for Loch Ness and a part-time journalist, in a report in ''The Inverness Courier''.〔''The Sun'' 27 November 1975: ''I'm the man who first coined the word "monster" for the creature''.〕〔R. Binns ''The Loch Ness Mystery Solved'' pp 11–12〕〔''Inverness Courier'' 2 May 1933 "Loch Ness has for generations been credited with being the home of a fearsome-looking monster"〕 On 4 August 1933, the ''Courier'' published as a full news item the assertion of a London man, George Spicer, that a few weeks earlier while motoring around the Loch, he and his wife had seen "the nearest approach to a dragon or pre-historic animal that I have ever seen in my life", trundling across the road toward the Loch carrying "an animal" in its mouth. Other letters began appearing in the ''Courier'', often anonymously, with claims of land or water sightings, either by the writer or by family or acquaintances, or stories they remembered being told.〔R. Binns ''The Loch Ness Mystery Solved'' pp 19–27〕 These stories soon reached the national (and later the international) press, which described a "monster fish", "sea serpent", or "dragon",〔''Daily Mirror'', 11 August 1933 "Loch Ness, which is becoming famous as the supposed abode of a dragon..."〕 eventually settling on "Loch Ness Monster".〔The Oxford English Dictionary gives 9 June 1933 as the first usage of the exact phrase ''Loch Ness monster''〕
On 6 December 1933, the first purported photograph of the monster, taken by Hugh Gray, was published in the ''Daily Express'',〔R. P. Mackal (1983) "The Monsters of Loch Ness" p.94〕 and shortly afterwards the creature received official notice when the Secretary of State for Scotland ordered the police to prevent any attacks on it.〔''Daily Mirror'' 8 December 1933 "The Monster of Loch Ness – Official! Orders That Nobody is to Attack it" ... A Huge Eel?"〕 In 1934, interest was further sparked by what is known as The Surgeon's Photograph. In the same year R. T. Gould published a book, the first of many that describe the author's personal investigation and collected record of additional reports predating 1933. Other authors have claimed that sightings of the monster go as far back as the 6th century (see below).

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