Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Google honors the Loch Ness Monster – AIM Digital

81 years ago, the Daily Mail published a photograph taken by Robert Kenneth Wilson. In this image could be seen as a figure, elongated neck protruded from an aqueous surface. When this photograph was released, people in the Highlands of Scotland did not hesitate, the figure was the monster of Loch Ness.

 Fotograf & # xed; a by Robert Kenneth in which supposedly looks & # XED; to the Loch Ness monster.

Photo by Robert Kenneth where supposedly saw the Loch Ness monster.

However, years later, would show that the photograph was a hoax. No matter, the germ for ‘hunting’ the monster was planted, and thousands of tourists and hunters myths approached the Scottish lake to explore and find some evidence of the monster.

‘Nessie’, as he is nicknamed locals, was last seen at least once a year since 1925. However, this 2015 is significant because it is the first time in this time the most famous inhabitant of Loch Ness has not been seen by anyone, approximately from 2013 with a photograph captured by mapping services of Apple, which ultimately proved to be a confusion.

But the giant Google has been the last to attempt what no one has managed graphically capture the real monster . For it moved to a team of partners in this project Catlin Seaview Survey, which dived into the depths of the lake, capturing a lot of pictures during his tour. While, on the surface, did the same boat along the 37 kilometers covered.

Search the monster of Loch Ness
Anyone interested in searching the depths of Loch Ness you can do with the known implementation of Street View, and perhaps find in this way an indication that ‘Nessie’ still waters Scottish loch.

This is the tribute that Google devotes a ‘Nessie’, plus a doodle in your browser, where you can see the monster as a kind of submarine, pedal operated by aliens. All this with the intention that the popularity of monster does not falter.

Consisting of several interrelated bodies of water, including Oich River south and north Bona Narrows, Loch Ness extends along 37 kilometers southwest of the town of Inverness. Although not the largest lake in Scotland for surface and depth, it is the one with more water as it contains more fresh water than all the lakes in England and Wales together.

A Street View image taken by divers. Google
With almost 243 meters deep, you can find a whole world beneath the surface, something that has given rise to the legend of ‘Nessie’.
El Mundo, Spain

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