Loch Ness Investigator Closes In On Monster
Loch Ness Investigator Bill McDonald believes he has now compiled enough evidence to indicate what the Loch Ness Monster is, why it’s been so difficult to photograph, and why the Highland Government is covering up a new discovery that could lead to conclusive DNA evidence.
Mesa, AZ (PRWEB) July 11, 2005 -- Loch Ness Investigator Bill McDonald
believes he has now compiled enough evidence to indicate what the Loch Ness
Monster is, why it’s been so difficult to photograph, and why the Highland
Government is covering up a new discovery that could lead to conclusive DNA
evidence.
Before he could go public, however, he needed permission from a
fiction author.
“Back in December I was receiving urgent e-mail from my
contacts in Invernesshire regarding rare land sightings,” says McDonald, a
forensics expert who has been studying Loch Ness since 1993. “Because I didn’t
have the funds to make the trip, I approached MEG author Steve Alten, who I knew
was finishing up a fictional thriller about the creature (The LOCH, published in
May). I told Steve that I could make his book as real as possible, giving him an
exclusive on my research, if he’d pay my way to Scotland. He met with his
publisher (Tsunami Books) and they agreed. The result is one of the scariest and
best researched thrillers you’ll ever read.”
But the terms of the
agreement forbade McDonald from going public until mid-July.
“It was
this whole Loch Ness Tooth business that released me from the non-disclosure,”
McDonald explains. “When two American students contacted me about finding a
mutilated deer carcass and a shed 4-inch barbed tooth, I thought it was a hoax.
Then they sent me the photos and video (posted at www.LochNessTooth.com). I
had three different marine biologists and a paleo-guy render verdicts on the
tooth, and they unanimously agreed that this was no hoax, that the tooth
belonged to a mutation of an eel species that inhabits Loch Ness. . .concurring
with my research.”
McDonald claims the mutation is fifty feet
long!
“It ‘s an amphibious fish, predatory, and definitely a female.
Unable to reenter the open water to spawn, it just keeps growing bigger. But all
the theories in the world won’t mean a thing until we force the Highland
Government into returning that tooth.”
The tooth was taken from the
students by a water bailiff. McDonald has offered a $100,000 reward for
information leading to its return, and is chasing down several promising leads.
“We’re getting close now. Give me a few more months.”
Media
Contact:
Michael Drew
Promote-A-Book
850-747-8188
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/7/prweb250215.htm