Gallery
This is where my team has compiled images of random creatures and and evidence that might help with the disappearances.
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Cadborosaurus
According to witnesses, Cadborosaurus willsi has parallel vertical coils or humps behind the horse-like head and long neck, as well as a pair of small elevating front flippers and either a pair of hind flippers or a pair of large webbed hind flippers fused to form a large fan-like tail region that provides forward propulsion.
Dr. Edward Blousfield, former head zoologist of the Canadian Museum of Nature, and Dr. Paul LeBlond, director of Earth and Ocean Sciences at UBC, every elongated creature has been presented as an explanation for the Cadborosaurus. Some of these creatures include conger eels, humpback whales, elephant seals, ribbon or oarfish, basking sharks, and sea lions.
temporary stuff here
Champ
Champ or Champy, a lake monster, is said to live in Lake Champlain, a body of freshwater shared by New York, Vermont, and parts of Quebec, Canada. Lake Champlain stretches about 125 miles (201 km).The monster story is an attraction in the towns of Plattsburgh, New York, and Burlington, Vermont.
Over the years, 300 claims of Champ sightings have been filed. The myths' origins may be traced in Iroquois legend about giant snakes known as Onyare'kowa by the Mohawk. Some claim that Samuel de Champlain, a French geographer was the first European to observe Champ in 1609. The first documented source for this allegation is the summer 1970 issue of Vermont Life. Champlain observed a "20-foot serpent thick as a barrel, with a horse's head," according to the magazine.