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DID LOCH NESS MONSTER HAVE A BROTHER?

Four-Ton Sea Creature Is Shot v Off Galway Coast

TTAD the Loch Ness monster a brother? A strarige creature 49ft long, with a circumference of 26ft, was shot half a mile from Galway Harbour recently, and lying on the beach attracted thousands of people from far and near. Estimates of the Loch Ness monster have been that it is 20 to 30 ft long. The Galway creature was seen swimming slowly, round the bay through a period of 10 days, and fishermen had become alarmed because their nets were being constantly destroyed. John Crowley, the keeper of Mutton Island Lighthouse, while cleaning the lamps, noticed a dark, massive object moving close to the surface of the water about 150 yards away and causing a wave as it moved. He dashed to his rifle, and by the time he levelled it the monster was about 100 yards away. He is a fine shot, and five times he fired into the monster’s head. The creature gave a terrific wriggle, leapt a couple of feet into the air, and then fell into the water ' with an enormous splash. It then gave another convulsive movement before lying still on the sea. Mr Crowley called for assistance, and the carcase was towed on to the beach. Experienced fishermen around the coast and officials of Galway Harbour are mystified. i Men who have spent more than half a century on the sea said they had never heard of or seen anything like it before. These meA said that the monster was neither of the whale nor the shark species. It had no blowhole in the head, but there was a fin on the body, similar to the dorsal fin of the shark.

Mr T. Tierney, harbourmaster of Galway, said: “I have never seen anything like it in my experience of the sea. It probably belongs to the same species as the Loch Ness monster.” When a “Daily Mail” reporter read the description of the monster to the Keeper and Deputy-Keeper of Zoo-

logy at the Natural History Museum, South Kensington, they both inclined to the theory that it was some species of shark. Dr W. T. Calhan the keeper, said: “It may be a tasking shark, a creature which is common .off the Isles of Aran, but I should have thought that the Galway fishermen would be well acquainted with this species and would recognise one if they saw it.” Mr Martin A. C, Hinton, deputykeeper, stated: “It sounds like some big type of shark. I do not think it is heavy enough for a whale. In any case a whale would have a blow hole.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19350720.2.110.56

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 20 July 1935, Page 10 (Supplement)

Word Count
447

DID LOCH NESS MONSTER HAVE A BROTHER? Taranaki Daily News, 20 July 1935, Page 10 (Supplement)

DID LOCH NESS MONSTER HAVE A BROTHER? Taranaki Daily News, 20 July 1935, Page 10 (Supplement)