Apple Inadvertently Intensifies the Search for Loch Ness Monster

This morning my inbox exploded with articles about the definitive Loch Ness monster sighting. The accompanying image is a low-resolution satellite image of a boat wake, available, apparently, only on Apple Maps. There's really not deconstruction needed

Amazing new images taken from space appear to show something swimming below the surface of the world's most famous loch. There had been fears that Nessie could have died after more than a year without a verified 

Nessie came to the world's attention in the 1930s when a picture emerged of the mysterious animal in the Scottish waters. There have been many attempts to prove that such a beast exists, rather than it being just an urban myth, but these have long been 

One of the world's most enduring mysteries added another layer recently, as amateur sleuths have discovered what they claim to be the Loch Ness Monster lurking under the water of the famous lake using satellite imagery from Apple Maps, after finding 

This morning my inbox exploded with articles about the definitive Loch Ness monster sighting. The accompanying image is a low-resolution satellite image of a boat wake, available, apparently, only on Apple Maps. There's really not deconstruction needed