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Several attempts have been made to look for this elusive "monster", but all have resulted in success, or proper proof of its existence. There have been underwater searches, "Lidar" scans (sending a laser pulse down from a plane or helicopter, and being able to view different densities of objects), and various other methods. Many scientists have tried to locate the Loch Ness Monster by tracking it underwater. Since the early 1960s, there have been official Loch Ness Investigation teams, and several attempts have been made to use sonar and underwater cameras to search for any monsters. None of the sonar or photographs have shown anything that looked like a large swimming animal. There was one photograph that looked very much like some kind of animal head, but they proved it was just an old eroded tree-stump (and actually pulled it into their boat to be sure). There have been a few photographs of something that might be a flipper or fin, but it could just as easily be a fish or floating branch or even just swirling dirt. Loch Ness has always been very murky, and it is hard to see anything underwater unless it is very close; this makes it hard to prove one way or another whether any monsters exist.

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I think you mean "none" not "all" in the first sentence. The loch is not only murky, it is also very deep.

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9y ago

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