By Donna
MacAllister
The discovery
of a new super-predator species could shine new light on the origins of the
Loch Ness Monster, it has been claimed.
Tyrannoneustes
lythrodectikos — which means blood-biting tyrant swimmer — were marine
predators similar to dolphins, with serrated teeth and a large gaping jaw
suited to feeding on large-bodied prey.
Its ancient
bones were found in a clay pit near Peterborough
in the early 1900s and a specimen is held by the Hunterian
Museum at Glasgow University .
Scientists at Edinburgh University suggested earlier this week
the species was distantly related to the modern-day crocodile after studying
its prehistoric skeleton.
Now Loch Ness
businessman Willie Cameron believes the reptile may have been the same creature
that local people had been reporting from the loch edge over the years.
He said:
"I’m not saying that it was there one week ago, two weeks ago, or even 100
years ago. I’m just saying previous sightings could have been something like
this."
Mr Cameron,
who runs Loch Ness Marketing, added the idea of a crocodile-type creature would
fit in with some sightings of the monster without a dorsal fin — countering the
suggestion that Nessie is an Atlantic sturgeon, a fish which can grow up to
12ft long.
It could also
reflect one of the thousands of unexplained sightings adding to the Nessie
mystery. In February 1932 it was reported that Miss K MacDonald saw a
"crocodile-like" creature making its way up the River Ness, which was
in spate, towards the loch. The creature had a short neck, long snout and some
reports suggested tusks.
Adrian Shine |
But
suggestions of a link to Nessie have been discounted as "just not
tenable" by one of the world’s leading authorities on dinosaurs, Angela
Milner.
Ms Milner, who
is a retired research associate with the Natural History Museum, said there was
"no way" that a crocodile could survive in the chilly waters of Loch
Ness.
"There
are quite a number of fossils already known from these clay pits and they are
170 million years old but at that time those things were living in shallow
fairly warm water, semi-tropical seas," she said. "Crocodiles do not
like our climate. We’re talking about things that have been perhaps seen in
Loch Ness — no way could a crocodile survive in it."
Loch Ness’s
own authority on the subject, Adrian Shine from the Loch Ness Centre
and Exhibition at Drumnadrochit, said: "Of course, it does not
fit the popular stereotype of the iconic long-necked plesiosaur that turned
people on, but we could enter a whole new debate as to what extent plesiosaurs
were able to raise their long-necks swan-like above the water."
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