The Loch Ness Monster is a cryptid, meaning it is an animal who's existence has not been proven. This creature, should it exist, has not been captured.
The Loch Ness monster comes under the classification of cryptid. It is an animal whose existence has not been proven or disproved. There is no scientifically correct classification.
The jearsy devil is a cryptid. Like bigfoot, loch ness monster, chupachabra, or a yeti. They are all real.
The Loch Ness Monster is an cryptid, and as such is unconfirmed as a real species of animal. Some believe that the creature that reportedly lives in the Scottish loch is a plesiosaur. Plesiosaurs were carnivorous aquatic animals that lived from the late Triassic period until the the end of the Cretaceous period.
Loch is the Scottish word for 'lake' and the 'loch' is part of the River Ness.
Yes and No at the same time. They both are lake monsters and they maybe prehistoric cryptids that got trap in lakes. However, they both lived in diffenent lakes, in different countries, in different continents, so they made have evoled diffenently. Also the Ogopogo is a serpent like cryptid, while the Loch Ness Monster is a plesiosaurus like cryptid.
No, there is no Loch Ness monsters in Mexico. The Loch Ness monsters is located in Scotland, in the Lake it is named for, Loch Ness.
I believe it's just Loch Ness, loch meaning lake.
If Nessie exists then as Nessie is a short name for 'The Loch Ness Monster' you would allegedly find it living in Loch Ness.
Loch Ness, ScotlandAt Loch Ness by St. Colombus
The Loch Ness Monster lives in the lake, Loch Ness. Loch Ness is a fresh-water lake. That's what "loch" means; "lake".
That would depend on the specific cryptid. Bigfoot would be within a couple of hundred pounds of a human, and the Chupacabra probably weighs slightly less than a human. The Loch Ness monster could be several tons, as is the giant squid, which was formerly considered a cryptid.