An interesting headline from the British Library website:
Researchers at the
British Library have found sensational evidence for the existence of
the Loch Ness Monster. Hidden within the pages of a 12th-century manuscript is
not only a description but also a drawing of the beast known to millions as
Nessie.
Researchers at the library claimed to have unearthed a manuscript featuring a cleric by the name of Walter of Bingham whose travels to Scotland were recorded in the 12th century manuscript "Itinerarium Scotiae". The faded but now restored picture shows a hapless individual being dragged into the depths of Loch Ness by the monster. The full account can be read at this link. Before Nessie researchers jump up and down, you may want to note the date of the article.
Oddly enough on the same day, another eye opening article appeared on the Gadling travel website claiming that:
Tourism officials at Loch Ness made a shocking revelation today – the Loch Ness Monster is a creation of their marketing department.
"It all started back in the early years of the 20th century," says Nigel Pratt, Public Relations Manager for the Loch Ness Convention and Visitors Bureau. "You have to remember that Scotland was very poor back then. Tourists generally went to vacation hotspots like Blackpool. It was tough to compete. "Highlander" hadn't come out yet so nobody knew the first thing about Scotland. They didn't know their haggis from a hole in the ground."
"It all started back in the early years of the 20th century," says Nigel Pratt, Public Relations Manager for the Loch Ness Convention and Visitors Bureau. "You have to remember that Scotland was very poor back then. Tourists generally went to vacation hotspots like Blackpool. It was tough to compete. "Highlander" hadn't come out yet so nobody knew the first thing about Scotland. They didn't know their haggis from a hole in the ground."
Note again the date of the publication and the name of the alleged tourist official. One is reminded of the day on April 1st 1972 as told by the Daily Mirror:
On 1 April 1972, newspaper headlines around the
world announced the dead body of the Loch Ness Monster had been found. A
team of zoologists from Yorkshire's Flamingo Park Zoo, who were at Loch
Ness searching for proof of Nessie's existence, had discovered the
carcass floating in the water the day before. Initial reports claimed it
weighed a ton and a half and was 15½ feet long. Upon inspection, Nessie
turned out to be a bull elephant seal.
The zoo's education
officer, John Shields, confessed he had been responsible for placing the
body in the Loch. The seal had died the week before, and he had shaved
off its whiskers, padded its cheeks with stones, and kept it frozen for a
week, before dumping it in the Loch. The seal's body was displayed at
the Flamingo Park Zoo for a few days before being properly disposed of.
POSTSCRIPT
These April Fool Nessie jokes just keep coming:
Loch Ness Monster Burger suitable for those on vegan diets