News

An image on Apple Maps' satellite view appears to be a huge creature below the surface of Loch Ness. The actual explaination? A boat wake, with the low-contrast boat barely visible.
Loch Ness also holds more water than any other loch — about 263,162 million cubic feet (7,452 million cubic m) — followed by Loch Lomond (92,805 million cubic feet or 2,628 million cubic m ...
A mysterious, provocative image appearing in a satellite view of Scotland's Loch Ness isn't Nessie. By Damon Poeter April 21, 2014 ...
An image circulating the Internet supposedly shows what some think could be the Loch Ness Monster from satellite imagery, according to the Daily Mail. The image was accessed using Apple’s ...
The first Loch Ness Monster sighting of 2025 lasted for minutes and was caught on camera. The photos were later shared with research institutions dedicated to the study of Scotland’s Loch Ness.
A pair of cyclists mounted Google's Street View trikes this morning to pedal around Scotland's Loch Ness and the overlooking Urquhart Castle -- ruins from the 13th century ...
Just as Google Maps’ Street View feature gives drivers a 360-degree look at any address they’re heading to, its panoramic views of Loch Ness provide startlingly clear impressions of the lake ...
A View From Bottom Of Loch Ness October 9, 2003 / 4:29 PM EDT / AP Lloyd Scott has just spent 12 days at the bottom of Loch Ness, but he reported no sightings of the lake's legendary monster.
Perhaps the most surprising thing about Google's Street View team taking to Loch Ness is that it didn't do it sooner. The imagery is up now, though, allowing you to plunge to the icy depths of the ...
A satellite photograph has many people wondering whether the elusive Loch Ness monster might have been photographed from space. The image seems to show a strange, ghostly oval shape with trailing ...