I found this item on Dale Drinnon’s
blog.
This report is actually very
important because it tips the scale firmly to the long necked Elasmosaurus away
from a pure sea serpent which may never have existed at all. The long neck does the trick nicely in terms
of generating all such reports. The
creature has now been eyeballed by professional observers. It does not get any better than this.
Better it comes from exactly that
one class of observers who had a chance of actually sighting such a creature.
These creatures do not surface in the presence of props turning anywhere and as a result, encounters have become exceedingly rare, and they were exceedingly rare to encounter in the first place on the open sea.
Our own pursuit of their lifeway
has made it pretty clear that these creatures have no real reason to surface at
all and generally do not. Their actual
food needs are likely similar to a giant snake.
They likely swallow their prey also.
There are hundreds of lakes in the Boreal forest
of Canada and Russia that are accessible and
suitable and rarely visited by humanity.
My present guess is that they
breed off New England and then lay eggs and
brood young in every deep water lake they are able to access.
Our known witnesses have been on
the few lakes providing us good access.
Sighting a Sea Serpent
RAF navigator believes he saw one of the last of the large dinosaurs
By Dr Karl Shuker
January 2009
Artwork of two Elasmosaurus marine reptiles swimming underwater.Chris Butler / Science Photo Library
Kent-based cryptozoological researcher Neil Arnold recently passed on to me, with kind permission from its source to publish it here, a remarkable, previously undocumented sea serpent sighting from the late 1950s. Neil’s source was a correspondent called Nick (whose email address I have on file), and one of the eyewitnesses in question was his father. Nick is anxious that the sighting be preserved, so here is his account of it:
“I am 39 years old with three children and my father is now 72. He was
one of the last people to have been conscripted to national service, serving as
navigator on RAF Shackleton aircraft in 1957, flying missions over Europe and
much of South America . The official job of the
Shackleton was as a spotting aircraft, and both pilot and crew were highly
trained in this respect; their job was to search for submarines and relay the
positions back to base. One of the tell-tale signs they used to look for [from]
high above was a dark shape underwater, which could often be a shark or whale
or other creature, but occasionally they would get lucky and find a submarine
near to the surface. On one occasion, having seen such a dark shape near the
surface, they flew down to investigate, and as they flew by this shape, every
crew member on board saw the same thing – the neck and head of a large sea
creature protruding from the surface. The nearest thing they could think of at
the time was a plesiosaur. They were all in agreement but of course the pilot
on the way home forbade them absolutely from talking about it; if they had done
so they would all have been immediately grounded and accused of being drunk on
duty.
“So anyway, my father decided to research what the creature might have
been, and found that it was almost definitely an ‘elasmosaurus’ [long-necked
plesiosaur], as the one thing that was very obvious was the huge length of the
animal’s neck. My father was forced to conclude, and of course he’d read all
about the cœlacanth, that there were indeed much larger ‘extinct’ creatures out
there, unknown to science. He told me of the incident when I reached adulthood.
Twenty years on, he still will swear to his grave that this is what they all
saw on the flight…
“The year was 1957, the location was ‘about 500 miles [800km] north of
the Canary Islands , in open sea’. The RAF Squadron was 228 Squadron, flying out of St Eval in Cornwall . (This air base has since been closed, but I believe remnants of the site remain.) I don’t know who the other crewmembers were and I have been thinking about making an official enquiry to the RAF archives. However, what I hope is important is the location (vague, sorry), species and date. I am more than aware that most scientists consider the possibility of any large dinosaur [sic] still alive as astronomically small, and my father himself also thinks now with sadness that he might have seen one of the last ones; his own reasoning is that at this point, not so long after the war, there really was not much shipping around; indeed, the area where they had the sighting was entirely devoid of shipping and maybe this was the reason the creature had considered it safe to surface, far from the throb of ships’ propellers.”
One zoologist who read Nick’s account suggested that perhaps they had seen a tentacle from a giant squid rise above the water surface, but Nick’s father emphatically discounted any such possibility. If by any chance any other Shackleton crewmember who saw this creature is reading this item and would like to contact FT, we’d love to hear from you!
Nick, via Neil Arnold, 28 Nov 2008.
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