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Loch Ness Monster hunters delighted after surprise underwater discovery of perfectly preserved camera and film 180 metres below the surface of the Highland loch; the remnants of a search for Nessie in 1970





Sam Smith and Adrian Shine with the recovered camera and the modern underwater ROV.
Sam Smith and Adrian Shine with the recovered camera and the modern underwater ROV.

Nessie-hunting equipment lost to the waves of Loch Ness for more than half a century has been recovered 180 metres below the surface.

A robotic underwater vehicle operated by the UK’s National Oceanography Centre (NOC) made the chance encounter with a long-lost underwater camera system deployed in the 1970s - and, remarkably, it even still had undeveloped film inside.

Sadly there was no sign of the elusive beast among the now-developed photos, but the fluke encounter raised plenty of interest nevertheless.

During a test mission, the advanced underwater vehicle, designed for discovering the secrets of our global ocean, accidentally found the underwater camera system – thought to be one of the first attempts to catch the Loch Ness monster on film.

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It is believed that the camera, discovered around 180m deep in the loch during one of NOC’s early test dives, had been placed in the water in 1970, by Professor Roy Mackal, of the Loch Ness Investigation Bureau and the University of Chicago.

Adrian Shine, who set up The Loch Ness Project in the mid-1970s to investigate Loch Ness and its world-famous inhabitant, helped to identify the camera and says it was one of six deployed by Professor Mackal, with three of them lost in a gale that same year.

The sealed underwater camera, which was still dry inside.
The sealed underwater camera, which was still dry inside.

“It was an ingenious camera trap consisting of a clockwork Instamatic camera with an inbuilt flash cube, enabling four pictures to be taken when a bait line was taken,” he says. “It is remarkable that the housing has kept the camera dry for the past 55 years, lying around 180m deep in Loch Ness."

NOC has been trialling its underwater robotics, including running multi-day, 24-hour, endurance tests, in Loch Ness for nearly a decade, but this is the closest the team – or its underwater robots – have come to encountering Nessie.

Sam Smith, ALR operations engineer, from NOC’s Marine Autonomous Robotics Systems (MARS) group, said: “At 230m deep, Loch Ness is an ideal location to testing our robotics, their sensors and systems, before they’re deployed in the deep ocean to help answer the big questions we have.

“While this wasn’t a find we expected to make, but we’re happy that this piece of Nessie hunting history can be shared and perhaps at least the mystery of who left it in the loch can be solved.”

The film, camera and its housing have now been handed to The Loch Ness Centre, in Drumnadrochit, near to where it was found, to allow it to be put on display as a part of the loch’s rich Nessie hunting history.

Nagina Ishaq, general manager of The Loch Ness Centre, home of The Loch Ness Project, added: “It’s been over 90 years since the first sighting of Nessie, since then there have been many expeditions to find the elusive beast.

“We are guardians of this unique story and, as well as investing in creating an unforgettable experience for visitors, we are committed to helping continue the search and unveil the mysteries that lie underneath the waters of the famous Loch.

The perfectly-preserved camera set-up.
The perfectly-preserved camera set-up.

“We want to say a big thank to NOC for handing over the film and camera, that we believe has been hidden for over 50 years, for everyone to come and discover and be inspired by what could be hidden in the mysterious loch.”

NOC’s Autosub underwater vehicle, known popularly as Boaty McBoatface, discovered the camera when part of the mooring that had held the camera system in place got caught on the vehicle’s propeller.

NOC have been developing advanced autonomous vehicles for more than 30 years. Its latest robotics trials in Loch Ness involve testing two Autosub vehicles, one that’s used for mapping seabed habitats and another used for long range autonomous operations.

These vehicles, available to the UK’s marine science community, can go down to as deep as 6,000 m water depth collecting a wide range of ocean data to answer the critical questions we have about the ocean, its health and how it supports our planet.

One of the images developed from the film.
One of the images developed from the film.

This data would be extremely difficult to get any other way, from detailed seabed maps and photography to physical, biological and chemical data in the water column.

“The ocean covers 70% of the surface of the earth, but there’s still so much we don’t know about it, the life in it, how both interact with our atmosphere and how climate change will impact those relationships,” added Smith.

“With our robots we’re also helping to map and monitor marine life to understand how our actions, such as offshore renewable energy development, fishing and deep-sea mining change habitats and ecosystems.

“So the work we do here, developing the technology to help us better understand the ocean, is critical. We’re grateful for the hospitality and support that local companies like Caley Marina and Gordon Menzies have provided over the years that means we get to do this work here.

One of the images developed from the film.
One of the images developed from the film.

“They were also instrumental in supporting the recovery of the underwater vehicle and the camera system, with Gordon skippering the Cluaran Dubh, and Steve Davren from Caley Marina skippering the Kelpie, with help also from an underwater locator device from subsea technology firm Sonardyne.”


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