On a December day in 1848 the sailing ship Pekin was
becalmed off the Cape of Good Hope near Southern Africa when a crew member
spotted a strange creature in the water. Careful examination of the animal by
use of a telescope revealed it to be snake-like, with a large head and shaggy
mane. Only two months before the HMS Daedulus had reported seeing a
sea serpent in that very same region. Amid great excitement a small boat, it's
crew prepared to capture the animal, was lowered into the water. The captain,
Frederic Smith, watched from a distance, with concern for the safety of his men,
as the small boat approached the creature. To the Captain's surprise the animal
did not move at all as the boat drew near. He was even more surprised when the
crew of the boat proceeded to tow the "creature" back to the Pekin.
The sea serpent turned out to be a twenty foot long piece of
floating seaweed with a root shaped like a head and neck. Could the Daedulus sea
serpent been of similar origin? Judging distance, size and motion of an object in the sea is
extremely difficult. Objects on land can be compared to nearby trees and
boulders. In the water only the waves offer a clue to scale and the size of
waves vary enormously depending on weather conditions. The movement of the waves can also suggest motion where there is
none. Arthur Adams, a ship's surgeon in the 1860's, spotted what appeared to be
a mysterious creature moving through the water by using lateral undulations of
it's body. His ship's course was altered to intercept the animal and capture it.
When they approached the thing Adam's wrote: "By this time, however, a closer and more critical inspection
had taken place, and the supposed sea monster had turned himself into a long,
dark root, gnarled and twisted, of a tree, secured to the moorings of a fishing
net, with a strong tide passing it rapidly, and thus giving it an apparent
life-like movement and serpentine aspect." The Daedulus affair might also be explained by an abandoned
native canoe painted like a snake. L. Sprague de Camp suggested the owners of
the canoe may have harpooned a large sea animal, like a whale shark, and they
were either spilled into the sea when the animal surfaced under the boat, or
jumped in panic when they could not cut the line dragging the canoe...
Scientists have revealed a
mysterious recording that they say could be the sound of a giant beast lurking
in the depths of the ocean. Researchers have nicknamed the strange
unidentified sound picked up by undersea microphones "Bloop." While it bears the
varying frequency hallmark of marine animals, it is far more powerful than the
calls made by any creature known on Earth, Britain's New Scientist reported on
Thursday. It is too big for a whale and one theory is that it is a deep sea
monster, possibly a many-tentacled giant squid. In 1997, Bloop was detected by
U.S. Navy "spy" sensors 3,000 miles apart that had been put there to detect the
movement of Soviet submarines, the magazine reports. The frequency of the sound
meant it had to be much louder than any recognised animal noise, including that
produced by the largest whales. So is it a huge octopus? Although dead giant
squid have been washed up on beaches, and tell-tale sucker marks have been seen
on whales, there has never been a confirmed sighting of one of the elusive
cephalopods in the wild.
The largest dead squid on
record measured about 60ft including the length of its tentacles, but no one
knows how big the creatures might grow. For years sailors have told tales of
monsters of the deep including the huge, many-tentacled kraken that could reach
as high as a ship's mainmast and sink the biggest ships. However Phil Lobel, a
marine biologist at Boston University, Massachusetts, doubts that giant squid
are the source of Bloop. "Cephalopods have no gas-filled sac, so they have no
way to make that type of noise," he said. "Though you can never rule anything
out completely, I doubt it." Nevertheless he agrees that the sound is most
likely to be biological in origin. The system picking up Bloop and other strange
noises from the deep is a military relic of the Cold War. In the 1960s the U.S.
Navy set up an array of underwater microphones, or hydrophones, around the globe
to track Soviet submarines. The network was known as SOSUS, short for Sound
Surveillance System...
Share this Article :
(Read the FULL Article here... | 4090 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0 ) Posted by nuke on Wednesday, March 12 @ 10:27:31 CDT (101 reads)
Sea serpents and sea dragons
have been reported by ships for a long time. They are obviously not that
different to the dragons of mythology... it is simply that most of these do not
have myths attached to them. The story comes from the retelling of the sighting.
Some of the sightings remain mysterious and are possibly candidates for
undiscovered species. Others seem more likely to be something more mundane.
Faced with a topic like this, it is important not to be too quick to decide that
all sightings must be true or that all sightings are explained by other things.
Each case should be taken on its own merits.
Daedalus: In August 1848, the HMS Daedalus was
heading back to England from India. Whilst passing by the coast of Namibia, the
ship encountered a sea serpent. Captain M'Quhae described the serpent as about
60 feet long. It was floating on the water, with its head held above the water.
They could not see how it was moving as it was keeping its body still.
Presumably there was some other part under the water propelling it. It was said
to have a serpent's head, some sort of mane on its back and to be brown in
colouration (with yellow-white around the throat).The sighting caused some
controversy. Experts tried to come up with alternative theories for the
sighting, rather than accepting it could be true. Examples of suggestions were
it was a seal (the size was an error) or part of a ship being pulled by a
harpooned whale or shark under the water. Neither seemed to be a mistake a
seasoned (and sober) sea captain would be likely to make, though it is always
possible.
Hydrarchos: In 1845 Albert C. Koch unveiled a complete
sea serpent fossil skeleton, which he called Hydrarchos harlani. It was
alleged that it had been recovered in Alabama. The bones were put on display for
the public with a great deal of publicity. Koch certainly knew how to get the
viewers in for his finds. It was soon discovered to be a fraud. Koch has
constructed the creature from five fossil whale skeletons. Charles Lyell (1849)
wrote about how the fraud had been worked out: ...
Share this Article :
(Read the FULL Article here... | 16030 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0 ) Posted by nuke on Saturday, January 12 @ 10:59:20 CST (472 reads)
On a December day in 1848 the sailing ship Pekin was
becalmed off the Cape of Good Hope near Southern Africa when a crew member
spotted a strange creature in the water. Careful examination of the animal by
use of a telescope revealed it to be snake-like, with a large head and shaggy
mane. Only two months before the HMS Daedulus had reported seeing a
sea serpent in that very same region. Amid great excitement a small boat, it's
crew prepared to capture the animal, was lowered into the water. The captain,
Frederic Smith, watched from a distance, with concern for the safety of his men,
as the small boat approached the creature. To the Captain's surprise the animal
did not move at all as the boat drew near. He was even more surprised when the
crew of the boat proceeded to tow the "creature" back to the Pekin.
The sea serpent turned out to be a twenty foot long piece of
floating seaweed with a root shaped like a head and neck. Could the Daedulus sea
serpent been of similar origin? Judging distance, size and motion of an object in the sea is
extremely difficult. Objects on land can be compared to nearby trees and
boulders. In the water only the waves offer a clue to scale and the size of
waves vary enormously depending on weather conditions. The movement of the waves can also suggest motion where there is
none. Arthur Adams, a ship's surgeon in the 1860's, spotted what appeared to be
a mysterious creature moving through the water by using lateral undulations of
it's body. His ship's course was altered to intercept the animal and capture it.
When they approached the thing Adam's wrote: "By this time, however, a closer and more critical inspection
had taken place, and the supposed sea monster had turned himself into a long,
dark root, gnarled and twisted, of a tree, secured to the moorings of a fishing
net, with a strong tide passing it rapidly, and thus giving it an apparent
life-like movement and serpentine aspect." The Daedulus affair might also be explained by an abandoned
native canoe painted like a snake. L. Sprague de Camp suggested the owners of
the canoe may have harpooned a large sea animal, like a whale shark, and they
were either spilled into the sea when the animal surfaced under the boat, or
jumped in panic when they could not cut the line dragging the canoe...
Share this Article :
(Read the FULL Article here... | 9184 bytes more | comments? | Score: 4 ) Posted by Nuke on Friday, March 23 @ 12:34:47 CDT (881 reads)
This
is the story of one of the world's most elusive, mysterious and fantastic
creatures. It is a creature we know so very little about, despite the fact that
it was first scientifically described nearly 130 years ago. Clyde Roper, one of
the world's foremost researchers on the subject, points out that we know more
about the dinosaurs then we do about the giant squid. Is this true? If so, why?
A Clandestine Creature: Roper's statement is indeed true, and
reminds us repeatedly that the world's oceans quite possibly shelter even more
amazing animals yet to be discovered. Though BBC's
Weird Nature boldly stated that "The Giant
Squid is the last great mystery of the oceans," obvious truth states otherwise.
Consider the Indo-Pacific beaked whale (Indopacetus
pacificus), an air-breathing mammal that has never been seen in the flesh
and is known only from two skulls found on the beach, one in Somalia and the
other in Queensland.
In fact, we have more specimens of giant squid than we do
of Baird's beaked whale (Berardius bairdii),
the northern bottlenose whale (Hyperoodon
ampullatus), and the goose-beaked whale (Ziphius
cavirostris). Again, all air-breathing mammals that must come to the
surface. We are then left to do nothing less but ponder,
"What lurks beneath the churning waters that
cover so much of our globe? Have we the slightest notion what might be hidden by
that endless sprawl of hydrosphere? Who knows what fantastic creatures science
has yet to behold?"What
we do know about the giant squid in relation to habitation is this: They
primarily dwell in the great deeps of the ocean, rarely coming to the surface.
Though BBC's Weird Nature again boldly claims, "In fact, they only ever come to
the surface when dead or dying," truth, again, states otherwise...
Share this Article :
(Read the FULL Article here... | 11257 bytes more | comments? | Score: 4 ) Posted by nuke on Friday, November 10 @ 11:47:57 CST (724 reads)
Submitted by Waspie Dwarf: The fossil of a prehistoric sea monster that lived more than 144 million years ago has been found in a river on the edge of west Belfast. Colin Glen could become known as Northern Ireland"s Jurassic Park after the backbone of a plesiosaur was uncovered. Such a find was a chance in a million said Paul Bennett, the educational ranger at the park. "The 7cm section of vertebrae was found at Colin River. It would have belonged to a creature know as a "sea dragon" which was ... Read More
When strange blobs of rotting animal flesh wash ashore, Sidney Pierce usually gets a call. Pierce, a University of South Florida biologist, has analyzed "sea monster" samples from Chile, Tasmania and Bermuda, plus one piece of carcass found on a beach in St. Augustine, Fla., that spent more than a century in storage at the Smithsonian Institution. But in every case, DNA analysis has revealed the mystery mush to be highly decomposed whale blubber. "It's getting a little... Read More
Cryptozoology – a strange word for a strange science. Let's face it, any discipline which includes the study of everything from the Loch Ness monster, a fur-lined trout and millions of species of nematode worms is nothing if not eclectic.This science of finding as-yet-unknown creatures covers a broad area. It ranges from the sea monsters and chimera that most of the scientific community would dismiss, to the millions of creatures that we know do exist but have just never been seen or describ... Read More
Sea monsters are in the news and on television like never before. NBC has a hit show on Monday nights with "Surface," about a huge, terrifying aquatic creature, and sea monsters grace the cover of the December 2005 issue of National Geographic. Scientists working in Patagonia, South America, recently found remains of a 13-foot beast with four-inch teeth. The creature, dubbed "Godzilla" by its discoverers, is a distant relative of today's crocodiles and lived about 135 mil... Read More
North Wales film-makers bring ancient monsters and Celtic myths to life in a major new TV series. Celtic Monsters uses animation from Oscar-nominated Joanna Quinn's Beryl Productions to illustrate banshees, dragons, serpents, demons and omens of death including the ankou.The series is produced by Caernarfon-based Cwmni Da and Ireland's Midas Productions.Celtic Monsters was filmed on location in Wales, Ireland, Scotland and Cornwall and features inter-views with experts and storytellers.C... Read More
Scientists researching famous historical sightings of sea serpents uncovered more than they bargained for when they realised that a 270-year-old sighting of a “most dreadful” monster was more likely to have been an amorous whale. The discovery was made by a team from St Andrews University during its analysis of the incident off the coast of Greenland in 1734.Drs Charles Paxton and Sharon Hedley, of the university’s Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling, looked at four o... Read More