THE OCEAN.... NOT EVEN ONCE!

At least some jackass didn't photoshop a scary *** picture at the bottom of that chart like the last thread. **** had me scrolling down the 1st page with caution.
 
Thing is about those animals , nessy, Bigfoot, ect... is that there can't only be one. They'd have to be dozens of families reproducing in order for it to still be around. It'll also need a food source in order to sustain it (which is why nessy just can't be). Lastly dead bodies from last generation would be around somewhere.

If nessy was alive it wouldn't be in that lake, it'd be deep in the ocean located in warm water
 
They're gonna **** around and find Cthulhu down there

Scientists Discover Cthulhu Sea Cucumber That Terrorized Oceans 430 Million Years Ago
Behold the Great Old One, over there next to the seaweed.
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An image of Sollasinacthulhu showing how it would have looked on the seafloor.
Elissa Martin, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History


https://www.cnet.com/news/scientist...that-terrorised-oceans-430-million-years-ago/

Scientists have discovered a new species of ancient sea cucumber after creating a 3D computer reconstruction of the creature from a 430-million-year-old fossil.

The discovery was made by a team of international palaeontologists, led by the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, using a fossil discovered in a site in Herefordshire, UK. After reconstructing the image of the tentacled creature from the fossil, the team dubbed the species Sollasina cthulhu, after the terrifying monster Cthulhu from H.P. Lovecraft lore.

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Researchers ground the fossil, layer by layer, to create a 3D reconstruction of Sollasina cthulhu (the tube feet are shown in different colors).
Imran Rahman, Oxford University Museum of Natural History


The team at Oxford recreated the 3D by grinding away thin layers of the fossil, taking individual photographs at each stage to create a "virtual fossil."

The creature had multiple "tube feet" tentacles that it used to crawl over the seafloor and capture food, according to the research team. The 3D render also revealed an internal ring -- a first-time discovery for this group of extinct creatures -- that most likely formed part of a vascular system of "fluid filled canals" the creature used to move and feed.

While the fossil is only 3cm wide (just over 1 inch), researchers say "its many long tentacles would have made it appear quite monstrous to other small sea creatures alive at the time."

The research was published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B and conducted by researchers from Oxford University Museum of Natural History, University of Southern California, Yale University, University of Leicester and Imperial College London.
 
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