Whilst compiling the list of alleged Nessie carcasses, this one completely escaped my mind. Richard Carter was an active monster hunter back in the 1990s and found this skull on the shores of Loch Ness which then went through various hands before it seems ending up in a Yorkshire landfill site. Richard Carter no longer is on the Loch Ness scene, but in a recent exchange of messages with me, he still believes there is something unusual in the loch and is drawn to the Giant Eel theory.
It is probably a cat, and I recall F. W. Holiday talking about finding a wildcat carcass during his shoreline searches. But it could be something else (though not necessarily mysterious) and does show that things are found around the loch, albeit not of a Nessie nature. It is a matter then of figuring out what exactly it is (I contacted Steve Feltham who was of the opinion it was a cat).
The comments below are taken from a website on Scottish Big Cats.
In
February 1995, Richard Carter from Huddersfield, found, along the banks
of Loch Ness, the remains of an animal that he could not readily
identify. He gathered the bones and the skull, which reminded him of a
large cat, because of its fangs. The skull he gave to Steve Feltham who
later passed it on to Di Francis, the bones he took home to Yorkshire.
Later he discarded the bones in the dustbin. It was two years later, in
late 1997, when I visited Richard at his home. He showed me the
photograph and told me the brief details. He did have a report made,
which I think was by Rita Gould, although I never had the chance to see
it. So thats it, but I would liked to have seen the picture without the
decoration's around the skull. Also Richard would like to know what
became of the skull?
With
regards to the Loch Ness photo taken by Richard Carter, the features of
this skull were rather obscure. There appears, however, to be too many
teeth for it to be feline. To me its canine.
Nigel Brierly.
Nigel Brierly.
I tend to agree with Nigel that they could be of canine origin as the skull does seem to be some what elongated.
Clive Moulding (Beastwatch.)
Clive Moulding (Beastwatch.)
The
image is rather blurred and the skull is covered with debris making any
sort of identification very difficult. However, if it compared to the skulls identification section, I would agree that it does look possibly canine rather than felid.
Chris Smith, Scottish Big Cats
Chris Smith, Scottish Big Cats
About
15 years ago my dog found a large pile of seaweed on Winterton beach in
Norfolk. It was a badly decoposed body about 8 foot long with (rotted
bits it would be longer) very large canine teeth and jaws bigger than an
alsation. I eventually made up my mind that it must be a type of
sealion and left it to rot in peace.
Terry Dye
Terry Dye
Hello
Terry,
Thanks for the info. I've come across a few porpoises and seals on the
beach myself so the possibility that the Loch Ness skull might be a seal
or sea lion is an interesting one. Seals are often seen in the river
Don at Aberdeen so I guess there might be some in Loch Ness. I think
there are gates between the Loch and the sea so access might not be as
easy for aquatic creatures to the Loch as it is to the river Don.
Chris , Scottish Big Cats
P.S. Your comments reminded another member of the group that he also thought the skull might be a seal.
P.S. Your comments reminded another member of the group that he also thought the skull might be a seal.
The
Loch Ness skull: Other than the photographs on the SBCT website, little
exists. In discussion with Di Francis at beginning of this year I had
the chance to examine her collection of photographs first-hand, as
illustrated in her books/ articles.
She states the skull was passed over to amateur Loch Ness Monster hunter Steve Feltham, who then passed it on to her. She was ADAMANT the skull is only a "cat" be it F.cattus or F. sylvestris.
Looking at the photograph on your site, behind the upper canine teeth are 2 visible teeth, whose size, both relative to each other, and to the length of the maxillary upper jaw show it to be typically FELINE. The premolars are huge in cats, with characteristics of size and shape, clearly seen in the photograph, albeit a poor quality one.
Note, pinnipeds such as common seals, have short albeit very sharp, highly curved upper canines (cf photo - large canines, carnivore) and are followed by an array of premolar and molar teeth all very much the same in terms of size and morphology. I describe them as 'leaf' like, with 3 `trident like' cusps/spurs projecting above the gum margins.
The photo shows what appears to be an ear, rounded pinnal cartiledge flap of tissue behind the bulk of the skull. Comparatively the skull appears domestic-wild cat. The almond shaped eye like slit is rather deceptive. Ocular cavities of domestic cats and grampus are HUGE, the eye of dead animals rapidly looses moisture and dehydrates or ruptures, the slit like opening - the skin concaving into huge orbits, typified by "small cats", but felids in general.
Nothing I've seen of Loch Ness skull would convince me it is anything different from the 2 F.cattus/sylvestris skulls I have myself.
Aron Bowers
PS. I asked Di Francis what became of the skull, but she couldn't remember at the time where its' location is.
She states the skull was passed over to amateur Loch Ness Monster hunter Steve Feltham, who then passed it on to her. She was ADAMANT the skull is only a "cat" be it F.cattus or F. sylvestris.
Looking at the photograph on your site, behind the upper canine teeth are 2 visible teeth, whose size, both relative to each other, and to the length of the maxillary upper jaw show it to be typically FELINE. The premolars are huge in cats, with characteristics of size and shape, clearly seen in the photograph, albeit a poor quality one.
Note, pinnipeds such as common seals, have short albeit very sharp, highly curved upper canines (cf photo - large canines, carnivore) and are followed by an array of premolar and molar teeth all very much the same in terms of size and morphology. I describe them as 'leaf' like, with 3 `trident like' cusps/spurs projecting above the gum margins.
The photo shows what appears to be an ear, rounded pinnal cartiledge flap of tissue behind the bulk of the skull. Comparatively the skull appears domestic-wild cat. The almond shaped eye like slit is rather deceptive. Ocular cavities of domestic cats and grampus are HUGE, the eye of dead animals rapidly looses moisture and dehydrates or ruptures, the slit like opening - the skin concaving into huge orbits, typified by "small cats", but felids in general.
Nothing I've seen of Loch Ness skull would convince me it is anything different from the 2 F.cattus/sylvestris skulls I have myself.
Aron Bowers
PS. I asked Di Francis what became of the skull, but she couldn't remember at the time where its' location is.
Original Link Here.