Restoration of the Loch Ness monster as a long-necked seal (©
Anthony Wallis)
Although many mainstream palaeontologists may
shudder at the merest thought of it, the Loch Ness monster's most
readily-conceived public image will always be that of a typical plesiosaur –
all neck, tail, and paddled limbs. Lurking in its shadow, never too far from
scientific consciousness but a million miles away from popular recognition,
however, is a second cervically-endowed yet very different identity candidate –
the long-necked seal. Yet whereas the plesiosaur's at least erstwhile reality
is unequivocally validated by the fossil record (albeit one in which this
reptilian lineage is currently curtailed at a point over 60 million years ago),
tangible evidence for the existence at any point in our planet's history
of the kind of veritable giraffe-necked pinniped required to satisfy a
mammalian identity for Nessie and other comparable 'periscope-profile' aquatic
cryptids is conspicuous only by its absence. Indeed, to all intent and purpose there
is no more proof for the reality of the long-necked seal than there is for the
Loch Ness monster itself. So. when and how did this hypothetical horror come
into theoretical being, and why does it persist in casting its nebulous shadow over
the much more romantic (if no more realistic?) image of its plesiosaurian rival?
It's time to find out!
A LONG-FORGOTTEN LONG-NECKED SEAL
AT THE ROYAL SOCIETY
Although in modern times the concept of the
long-necked seal as a zoological reality has been promoted most visibly by the
cryptozoological triumvirate of Oudemans, Heuvelmans, and Costello, a
mysterious creature not only fitting its description but actually referred to
by that very same name had been documented as far back as the 1600s, but was
completely overlooked by cryptid chroniclers until the 1990s. This was when
American cryptozoologist Scott Mardis made a highly significant discovery, by
spotting its long-forgotten description on microfiche at the University of Vermont, after which he duly brought this surprising but potentially very
important beast to present-day public attention at long last via an article
published on 7 August 1996 in a Vermont weekly magazine entitled Vox.
In 1681, botanist Dr Nehemiah Grew published a
catalogue of curiosities that could be found at that time in the museum of London's Royal Society. It was entitled Musaeum Regalis Societatis: Or a
Catalogue and Description of the Natural and Artificial Rarities Belonging to
the Royal Society and Preserved at Gresham Colledge [sic], and among the many
specimen descriptions penned by Grew that it contained was one of a
still-unidentified form of long-necked seal, based upon a preserved skin from
an apparently young individual of this mystifying creature. Specifically referring
to it as 'the long-necked seal', Grew described it on p. 95 of his catalogue as
follows:
THE
LONG-NECK'D SEAL. I find him no where distinctly mention'd. He is much
slenderer than either of the former [two other
pinnipeds documented by him earlier – see below]. But that wherein he
principally differs, is the length of his Neck. For from his Nose-end to his
fore-Feet, and from thence to his Tail, are the same measure. As also in that
instead of fore-Feet, he hath rather Finns [sic]; not having any Claws thereon,
as have the other kinds.
Conversely, in
most known species of pinniped the length of their neck is only about half the
length of their lower body.
Grew's description
was subsequently reiterated by James Parsons in a paper on marine seals published
by Philosophical Transactions, a Royal Society journal, on 1 January 1751. In it, he listed various known species, and he
included the long-necked seal within this list. Here is Parsons's slightly
expanded version of Grew's original description of it:
He is much slenderer than either of the
former; but that, wherein he principally differs, is the length of his neck;
for from his nose-end to his fore-feet, and from thence to his tail, are the
same measure; as also in that, instead of his fore-feet, he hath rather fins;
not having any claws thereon, as have the other kinds. The head and neck of
this species are exactly like those of an otter…That before described [the long-necked
seal], was 7
feet and an half in length;
and, being very young, had scarce any teeth at all.
Accompanying its
description, moreover, was an illustration of this unidentified creature
(reproduced in Scott's Vox article), which portrayed it with a decidedly
elongate neck, and was captioned 'the long necked seal or sea-calf'. It was
depicted alongside two other seals (the same two as described by Grew prior to
the long-necked seal).
One of these two
was termed 'the common seal' (i.e. Phoca vitulina), and was readily
identifiable as this species. The other one, conversely, was more perplexing,
being dubbed 'the tortoise-headed seal' (and which must wait for its own review
elsewhere!). In his seal listing at the end of his paper, Parsons noted that
the long-necked seal could be found "on the shores of divers[e]
countries".
Be that as it may,
no additional skins of long-necked seals have been forthcoming since the time
of Grew and Parsons – their specimen thus being unique. So where is this
zoologically-priceless skin today – what may well be the only physical evidence
of a cryptozoological long-necked seal ever obtained by science? Tragically,
no-one knows – like so many other remarkable specimens of mysterious,
unidentified creatures, it has seemingly been lost, vanished into that great
void where cryptid material seems irresistibly and inexorably drawn, never to
be seen again.
FROM OUDEMANS TO HEUVELMANS – AND
FROM MEGOPHIAS TO MEGALOTARIA
Although, therefore, as revealed above, this was
not its earliest appearance in the historical chronicles, the long-necked seal
first made cryptozoological headlines during the early 1890s. This was when Dutch
zoologist and passionate sea serpent investigator Dr Anthonie C. Oudemans
envisaged just such a beast as the answer to one of the greatest riddles in 19th-Century
natural history – the elusive identity of the even more elusive 'great sea
serpent'.
After analysing numerous sea serpent reports
originating from seas all around the world and dating back centuries in some
cases, Oudemans considered that their most plausible explanation was the
scientifically-undiscovered presence of an enormous species of seal, boasting a
cosmopolitan distribution, and morphologically distinguished from all
presently-known species not only by its huge size (capable of growing up to 200 ft long) and long slender tail (a very unseal-like
feature), but, in particular, by its very sizeable, elongate neck (which bore a
noticeable mane in the male). In illustrations depicting its likely appearance
in life, it looked very like a mammalian plesiosaur (or a plesiosaurian
mammal).
Oudemans even gave this seagoing marvel its very
own taxonomic binomial – Megophias megophias, thereby classifying it as
a new species within a (now-defunct) genus that had been coined back in 1817 by
French-American naturalist and passionate sea serpent investigator Constantine
Samuel Rafinesque-Schmaltz in his published description of an uncaptured snake-like
marine cryptid responsible for a spate of reported sea serpent sightings off
Gloucester, New England, at that time (Megophias translates as 'big
snake').
Front cover of the first edition of
Oudemans's The Great Sea-Serpent, featuring a gilt representation of the
head of the Daedalus sea serpent (public domain)
In 1892, Oudemans published his extensive study and
conclusions in his now-classic tome The Great Sea-Serpent, which makes
fascinating if frustrating reading. For at the risk of perpetuating further
this unintentional bout of alliteration, his resolution of the sea serpent
problem was fatally flawed. Anyone reading the vast array of sightings
documented by him can readily perceive that the beasts observed belong to a variety
of discernibly distinct types. Yet Oudemans, inexplicably, chose to shoe-horn
them all into one, resulting in his creation of M. megophias as a
'one-size-fits-all' solution that was doomed to failure when attempting to
convince mainstream scientists already highly suspicious of sea serpent reality
that it was truly the taxonomic alter ego of this incognito maritime enigma.
Oudemans's illustrations of his
proposed long-necked (and long-tailed) mega-seal Megophias megophias
(public domain)
And so, inevitably, Megophias floundered,
Oudemans's ill-fated composite creation garnering little in the way of
zoological credibility for itself, and rapidly sinking without trace into the gloomy
abyss of scientific obscurity instead. And there it would linger, unloved and
unlooked-for, all but forgotten for almost three-quarters of a century, until
the long-necked seal hypothesis was finally retrieved, revived, and
reconstituted in a very different form as part of a much more comprehensive,
and complex, sea serpent classification conceived by a certain Belgian
cryptozoologist – Dr Bernard Heuvelmans.
Not only did Heuvelmans share a similar surname
with Oudemans, when his own magnum opus on the sea serpent mystery was first
published, in 1965 in French, it likewise shared the same name as
Oudemans's – Le Grand Serpent-de-Mer ('The Great Sea-Serpent'). (Three
years later, somewhat abridged and combined with a greatly-shortened version of
an originally separate book on the giant squid and giant octopus, it was
published in English as In the Wake of the Sea-Serpents.) And even his
postulated long-necked mega-seal had a similar generic name to Oudemans's Megophias
– namely, Megalotaria. But that is where the similarities ended.
First edition of Heuvelmans's tome Le
Grand Serpent-de-Mer (© Plon / inclusion here strictly on Fair Use/non-commercial basis only)
Not making the same mistake as his near-namesake
predecessor, in his grand scheme of sea serpent classification Heuvelmans
conceived no less than nine distinct categories. Each constituted a different,
scientifically-undiscovered species, and which he believed collectively
explained all of the major sea serpent sightings reported from around the world
down through history.
These hypothesised species were: a giant yellow
tadpole-like creature of indeterminate taxonomic affinities; a gigantic 'super eel' (and/or a very elongate
form of shark); a marine reptile resembling a prehistoric mosasaur or a
flippered crocodilian; an immense sea turtle; a many-humped serpentine
zeuglodont-like cetacean; an armoured anomaly that he considered to be another
zeuglodont due to his mistaken belief that armoured zeuglodonts were known from
the fossil record (in reality, these were later exposed to be normal
zeuglodonts whose remains had been found in association with armour-like scales
derived from other, entirely unrelated fossil creatures); an exceedingly
primitive stem cetacean of superficially otter-like form but much greater size
and still possessing four limbs (his so-called 'super-otter'); and two separate
types of pinniped, both of which were either tailless or near-tailless, like
all modern-day species.
One of these pinnipeds, with a shorter neck, huge
eyes, and a very noticeable mane, was dubbed by him the merhorse. The other,
which combined the body and limbs of a typical otariid or eared seal (i.e. fur
seals and sea-lions, possessing external ears) with an exceedingly long,
giraffe-proportioned neck, he dubbed the long-necked (nowadays shortened to
long-neck or longneck), and proposed for it the binomial name Megalotaria longicollis
('long-necked big otariid'). (Incidentally, in their 2003 book The Field
Guide to Lake Monsters, Sea Serpents, and Other Mystery Denizens of the
Deep, veteran American
cryptozoologists/fortean writers Loren Coleman and Patrick Huyghe merged the
merhorse and longneck into a single sea serpent type, which they dubbed the
waterhorse.)
After more than 70 years in zoological – and
cryptozoological – exile, the long-necked seal was back!
Restoration of the long-necked seal Megalotaria
longicollis in Heuvelmans's book, based upon his identikit description of
it (© Bernard Heuvelmans/Alika Watteau/Plon / inclusion here strictly on Fair Use/non-commercial basis only)
From analysing 82 eyewitness accounts of alleged long-necked
sea serpents, of which he deemed 48 to be certain, in his book Heuvelmans
produced the following 'identikit' description of what he considered the likely
morphology of this alleged cryptid to be:
A
sea-animal of fairly large size, much bigger than the biggest pinnpeds and
recognizable by its very long slender neck. Its general shape can vary greatly
because of its thick layers of fat: sometimes cigar-shaped, sometimes
serpentine when swimming fast, it may seem thick and stumpy when hunched up on
itself. The relatively small head is round in shape with a somewhat tapering
muzzle, sometimes like that of a seal or dog, sometimes like that of a horse,
camel or giraffe. This apparent contradiction in testimony is doubtless due to
the head lengthening with age, as is the rule among mammals.
The
eyes are very small and can hardly be seen except from very close. In young
ones there are a few whiskers on the muzzle. Two little horns can sometimes be
seen on the head; these are probably erectile tubes arising round the nostrils.
As the eyes are practically invisible, it is hard to place these tubes exactly
in relation to them: at all events they rise from the top of the head. They
would enable the animal to come to the surface to breathe without lifting its
head out of the water, an arrangement like the skin-diver's schnorkel [sic]…
The
neck is long and cylindrical; it is extremely flexible and can bend in any
direction, especially in a vertical plane like a swan's. It may also stick
perpendicularly out of the water like a telegraph pole. It has no mane, but a
sort of collar, perhaps a fold in the skin, behind the head is sometimes
mentioned.
The
body is massive, thick and covered with rolls of fat so that it may, according
as it bends, show one, two or three big dorsal humps, the middle of the three
being the biggest. It has been suggested that these humps are inflatable
air-sacs. This is possible, and the explanation cannot be excluded, but there
is no need for any such theory in this case.
The
spine forms a slight ridge all along its length, this may be due to a hairy
crest or be accentuated by one.
There
are four webbed feet, the front pair of which are often visible when the animal
stands up vertically in the water, as the pinnipeds often do…When the hind feet
are spread out in the same plane, they may sometimes look like a horizontal
bilobate tail, as in the cetaceans. But they can also be held face to face, as the
pinnipeds often do, and may then look like a fish's tail…
There
does not seem to be much tail: at the very most it is a mere stump.
The
skin looks smooth when it is wet and shining, but seen from close to it looks
wrinkled and rough, like a walrus's or an elephant's. It is very dark brown on
top, with black, grey or whitish mottling, while the underneath of the belly is
dirty yellow and much lighter.
…Apart
from one or two extravagant estimates of 200 feet or so, almost all the witnesses give a length
between 15 and 65 feet – 60 feet often being given in round figures. There is,
it is true, a series of witnesses who give lengths between 65 and 100 feet, and even as much as 120, but they seem to be
influenced by the preconceived idea that it is a serpent, a plesiosaur, or even
Oudemans's Megophias, and to assume it must have a tail as long as its
neck and so extrapolate unjustifiably from the visible part of the body.
Speaking of extrapolating unjustifiably: I first
read Heuvelmans's book over 30 years ago, and back then it seemed to me to be a
work of superlative, near-genius zoological detection, worthy of the peerless
if fictitious Sherlock Holmes himself (and indeed, Heuvelmans has actually been
referred to as the Sherlock Holmes of zoology). In later years, conversely, as
my own knowledge of cryptozoology, its methods, and its shortcomings increased,
I re-read the book several times, and on each occasion with increasing
scepticism regarding Heuvelmans's bold claims and intricate deductions.
Even taking into account the fact that he rejected
many eyewitness reports as implausible, I personally feel that he nonetheless placed
far too much emphasis upon the literal content of those that he did accept,
i.e. he drew in-depth, often excessive, conclusions from the descriptions contained
in those latter reports that, in my view, cannot be justified, because we
simply have no idea just how accurate those descriptions really were.
From my own experiences of eyewitness accounts, I
am well aware of the all-too-human failure of observers lacking a detailed
knowledge of animals to describe with any notable degree of zoological accuracy
the physical appearance of creatures that were unfamiliar to them (especially
if doing so entirely from memory, and/or from a time some distance removed from
the actual event and/or if they had encountered the creatures unexpectedly). This
also applies to size estimates proffered by them. Such failure is surely
responsible in no small way for the not-inconsiderable variations in eyewitness
descriptions noted by Heuvelmans in his extensive and inordinately-detailed Megalotaria
identikit account quoted by me above (and which is precisely why I
reproduced it verbatim), most notably regarding the shape of its head, rather
than (as he evidently if rashly believed) such variations being explicable entirely
via anatomical or age-related phenomena.
In short, I believe that Heuvelmans placed far too
much reliance upon the literal accuracy of eyewitness reports and far too
little upon the likelihood that much of what was described in them were
artefacts arising from poor zoological knowledge, inaccurate description, and
flawed recollection.
A third representation of Megalotaria
longicollis (© Stefano Maugeri/Gruppo Criptozoologia Italia / inclusion here strictly on Fair Use/non-commercial basis only)
In addition, following a close examination of
Heuvelmans's sea serpent researches and his resulting nine-category classification
system, German cryptozoologist Ulrich Magin argued in an extensive Fortean
Studies paper from 1996 that far from being the outcome of an objective data
analysis, Heuvelmans's sea serpent categories are subjective and predetermined,
and that they don't actually function successfully when applied to individual
cases. Magin's opinion is shared by British palaeontologist and cryptozoological
author Dr Darren Naish, as expressed in a Fortean Studies paper of his
own, from 2001.
Ideally, to avoid any subjectivity creeping into
the data analysis when attempting to distinguish morphological categories of
sea serpent present in the data, the analyser should be doing so blind, i.e.
using eyewitness descriptions alone as the basis for creating sea serpent
categories, not taking into account geographical localities or any other
factors like Heuvelmans did. However, the analyser would then be vulnerable to
falling foul of the uncertainty that invariably surrounds the accuracy of anecdotal
evidence. For the most comprehensive examination and assessment of Heuvelmans's
sea serpent classification, see Dr Michael A. Woodley's book In the Wake of
Bernard Heuvelmans (2008).
All of the above criticisms also apply in relation to
Heuvelmans's equally extensive, confident description of Megalotaria's
behaviour, yet once again based solely upon eyewitness testimony. According to
his interpretation of such sources, this elusive giraffe-necked maritime
cryptid:
…is
certainly the only sea-serpent that is amphibious. It is extremely flexible.
The chief component of its movements is in the vertical plane; and this is
mainly seen in its head swinging backwards and forwards when raised out of the
water. This is also striking when the animal bounds on land, rhythmically
gathering its hind legs up near its front ones and then leaping forward with
the front ones, as the sea-lions do.
Observers
are often struck by the animal's staggering speed, which is quite exceptional
at sea. Prodigious speeds, like that of an express train are mentioned, but
more trustworthy witnesses, with more knowledge of the sea, generally give
speeds between 15 and 35 knots. Such speeds seem to imply that it is a predator
feeding on very fast-swimming fish. To catch its prey, the long-necked
sea-serpent must make use of its long flexible neck to dart its jaws suddenly
well ahead of its body.
When
the animal moves very fast turbulence waves appear on its very fat body as they
sometimes do on the fatter pinnipeds, and this creates an illusion of small
humps close together…
No
breath is ever visible. When the animal appears on the surface it sometimes
leaves a greasy wake on the sea, as pinnipeds likewise do.
A
careful study of this type of animal…shows that its sight is rather poor…it
must hunt its prey chiefly by sonar, as all the pinnipeds seem to do...
It
is evidently like a sort of huge gressigrade [i.e. otariid] pinniped with a
very long neck, and more specialized than the sea-lions for a purely marine
existence. It is true that this usually pelagic animal is still able to move on
land, but it seems unlikely that it is obliged to go there to give birth:
parturition must be able to take place at sea, a considerable advance over the
sea-lions.
In addition to my above concerns regarding how
literally he took eyewitness description, I also have some rather more specific
criticisms of Heuvelmans's giant long-necked seal as the identity of the
longneck sea serpent.
Robert Elsmore's ingenious
illustration of a living Megalotaria superimposed upon the historical
long-necked seal image in Parsons's 1751 paper (© Robert Elsmore)
For a creature as huge as Megalotaria yet
only possessing tiny eyes, poor eyesight, and vibrissae present only in
juveniles, utilising sonar for hunting its prey would not be an unreasonable
prediction (as long as we remember that these above-cited characteristics are
based entirely upon anecdotal, not physical, evidence). However, it is rendered
far less plausible by the stark fact that even today, a full half-century after
Heuvelmans wrote those above-quoted lines concerning this possibility, there is
still no consensus that pinnipeds actually do employ sonar in hunting prey;
over the years, this intriguing possibility has attracted many claims and
counterclaims, but no conclusive evidence has been forthcoming. Nor has any for
the possession of snorkel-like breathing tubes arising round the nostrils in
any known pinniped species; so although such structures might indeed explain
eyewitness reports of supposed horns, they would nevertheless be a notable
evolutionary novelty.
The single most striking feature of Megalotaria,
the one that earns for it its common name, is its exceedingly long neck. According
to Heuvelmans, this neck "is extremely flexible and can bend in any
direction, especially in a vertical plane like a swan's". One wonders,
however, exactly how flexible did he mean by "extremely flexible", in
view of the fact that as a mammal Megalotaria is exceedingly likely to
have possessed only seven cervical vertebrae. It is the rotational and pivotal
capacity of a vertical bony prong arising upwards from the axis (the second
cervical vertebra) called the dens, which protrudes up through the ring-shaped
atlas (the highly-specialised first cervical vertebra), yielding the
atlanto-occipital joint, that enables the mammalian head (attached directly to
the atlas) to turn through a considerable angle horizontally, and also to nod
up and down.
But what about the rest of the neck? Assuming that
it does contain only seven vertebrae, how feasible are Heuvelmans's claims about
the extreme, swan-like flexibility of the neck of Megalotaria? One might
expect from the vertebrae alone that through much of its length, it would be as inflexible as a stiff
rod, but neck flexibility in mammals is mediated to a considerable extent by the intervertebral cartilage discs and caps, so Megalotaria's neck may well be more flexible than might otherwise be assumed. Also of note is that the giraffe's very long cervical vertebrae are connected to one
another via ball-and-socket joints, thereby affording each section of the neck
a remarkable degree of flexibility for such an exceptionally elongated
structure yet composed of only a small number of very long internal prop-like structures. Might Megalotaria
possess a comparable cervical arrangement? If so, however, this would be yet another
major evolutionary novelty unparalleled among other pinnipeds.
Equally problematic is
Heuvelmans's proposal that Megalotaria is a pelagic otariid that gives
birth at sea, bearing in mind that otariids are in fact the most terrestrial of
all pinnipeds, much more so than phocids or earless seals. For unlike phocids,
the otariids can turn their hind limbs forward and are therefore able to walk
on land. Also, they all breed on land, they come ashore more often than phocids
(especially when moulting their fur), and often the adult males each maintain a
harem of females on land (polygyny). Consequently, otariids are the least
likely seals to have yielded a species exhibiting the predominately sea-living lifestyle
that he envisaged for Megalotaria. Also, it is the phocids, not the
otariids, that have also produced the biggest known modern-day pinnipeds – the
two species of elephant seal Mirounga spp (which are even bigger than
the walruses). And Heuvelmans's assertion that Megalotaria "bounds
on land, rhythmically gathering its hind legs up near its front ones and then
leaping forward with the front ones, as the sea-lions do", which does
recall the terrestrial locomotion of otariids rather than phocids, was actually
based upon just a single eyewitness account, so it is hardly a well-attested
characteristic. Overall, therefore, it is more likely that if Megalotaria
does exist, it is a phocid, not an otariid (Megaphoca, anyone?).
Heuvelmans discounted the possibility that the
longneck sea serpent sports anything but the shortest of tails – if, indeed, it
possesses one at all. This clearly corresponds with a pinniped identity (a
major problem with Oudemans's Megophias as any kind of seal was its very
lengthy tail, because modern-day pinnipeds are conspicuously bereft of such a
sizeable appendage). Yet he seemingly chose to ignore those eyewitness accounts
that described longnecks with long tails. True, some such tails may have been artefacts,
i.e. merely wakes or trails of bubbles, but others seemed genuine structures.
Heuvelmans concluded his coverage of Megalotaria
by stating that apart from polar waters it exhibited a cosmopolitan
distribution (an assertion drawn from the geographical distribution of
eyewitness reports), generally sighted near the coast in cold temperate regions
and in mid-ocean in warm temperate zones. Based upon more detailed analysis of
the geographical spread of sightings plotted against the time of year when they
have occurred, Heuvelmans further concluded that Megalotaria prefers
spending the spring and warm season in northern cold temperate regions,
migrating to the tropics to spend the end of the summer and the autumn there,
before moving even further south into the southern hemisphere's temperate zone to
spend the end of this latter hemisphere's summer there, thus avoiding entirely
the cold extreme of the northern winter.
However, the reality of a highly mobile (and hence
more readily encountered?) species of seal that is also "much bigger than
the biggest pinnipeds" and occurs globally is one that I find difficult to
accept. After all, the biggest pinniped currently known to exist today, the
mighty southern elephant seal Mirounga leonina, already measures up to 22.5 ft long and can weigh over 10,000 lb – dimensions that are hardly inconsiderable.
Vintage photograph from 1936
depicting Goliath the elephant seal and his keeper at Vincennes Zoo, Paris, which readily reveals the huge size of such pinnipeds (public domain)
Yet if Heuvelmans is to be believed, this latter
pinniped is positively dwarfed by a truly colossal species that is three times
its size, and whose long-necked morphology sets it even further apart from all
other pinnipeds, but which, incredibly, is still unrepresented by a single
specimen. Not even so much as a beached skull or skeleton portion appears ever
to have been discovered and retrieved on any coast anywhere in the world, despite
Heuvelmans's assertion that the longneck is of cosmopolitan distribution, and
whereas occasional remains even of exceedingly little-known and quite possibly
uncommon species of beaked whale and other very large, exclusively maritime
mammals have indeed been found washed ashore.
In 2007, an extensive 117-page article written by
cryptozoological enthusiast Robert Cornes that supported the possibility of the
longneck sea serpent and its freshwater counterpart constituting some form of
undiscovered long-necked pinniped was published in that year's CFZ Yearbook,
and included a number of thought-provoking speculations. One of these was that
perhaps this surreal seal does come ashore to breed (rather than doing so at
sea, as proposed by Heuvelmans) but remains unseen while on land by breeding in
remote, inaccessible caves. Bearing in mind that seals breeding on land is
generally not only a very visual affair but also a very noisy one, it would
surely require a highly secluded location indeed for Megalotaria to
breed while remaining out of earshot. Another speculation concerned whether the
lengthy neck may assist in thermoregulation, in a manner reminiscent of one confirmed
with seal flippers – in which warm blood can be diverted into these limbs,
after which they are waved in the air to assist the animal in cooling off.
A long-necked seal drawn by Mark North on the front cover
of the CFZ 2007 Yearbook, which contains Cornes's very detailed article
on this hypothetical pinniped (© CFZ/Mark North)
Also in 2007, sea serpent researcher Bruce A. Champagne
published a comprehensive article entitled 'A classification system for large,
unidentified marine animals based on the examinations of reported observations'
within the multi-contributor tome Elementum Bestia (edited by American
cryptozoologist Craig Heinselman). Like Heuvelmans, Champagne differentiated nine different sea serpent types,
but they did not all correspond with Heuvelmans's; moreover, he also subdivided
some of these types to yield several subtypes.
One of Champagne's nine types was the longneck, which he then split
into two subtypes, distinguished primarily via the size of the head in relation
to the neck diameter. Most longneck sightings were assigned by him to the first
subtype, in which the head's diameter was the same as or slightly smaller than
that of the neck. In addition, and going totally against Heuvelmans's opinion, Champagne proposed that this longneck subtype sported a long
tail (thereby hearkening back to Oudemans and Megophias). The second
subtype, in which the head's diameter was larger than the neck's, consisted of
five sightings from the North Atlantic off Great Britain and Denmark, and all
five of these featured robust animals that, according to the eyewitnesses, were
over 55 ft
long, and therefore much bigger than those longnecks constituting the first
subtype, which did not exceed 30 ft at most.
Representation of Champagne's two longneck subtypes,
compared with Heuvelmans's Megalotaria longneck (© Tim Morris)
To me, the longneck sea serpent is an enigma – a
cryptid that I want so much to exist, as it would solve so many
cryptozoological riddles – and not just marine ones either, as I'll be
discussing in Part 2 of this ShukerNature blog article (click here) – but which, at least in
the guise of Megalotaria as envisaged by Heuvelmans, seems beset by
serious shortcomings.
This ShukerNature blog article is excerpted from my
forthcoming book, Here's Nessie!: A Monstrous
Compendium from Loch Ness.
William Michael Mott's spectacular
artwork featuring a trio of horned/snorkelled longnecks, which will be appearing
in my Nessie book (© William Michael Mott)
If these creatures were a mammal such as a seal, wouldn't they have a more active presence in a relatively small body of water such as Loch Ness? eg. breathing air, raising young etc. Could a family of such animals remain so little known after all these decades of observation?
ReplyDeleteI would have thought so, yes - one of many reasons why the long-necked seal hypothesis is, I feel, unsatisfactory here.
DeleteI've thought perhaps an unknown large long-necked turtle species could be responsible for at least some of the freshwater reports and maybe some marine reports. Turtles are good at hiding at the bottom of rivers and lakes, can breath stealthily, and eat almost anything...
DeletePosts like this prove why we need more Karl Shukers in this field and less of the other guys. Bravo.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, David, I really appreciate this!
DeleteMy pleasure! Keep looking at things in an intelligent, scientific manner, and you have a reader in me for life.
DeleteThanks again, David, and I hope that you enjoy Part 2 of my long-necked seal article too.
DeleteSure did. Working overtime to get back up to date with all here :)
DeleteLong necked seals might be possible as an explanation for the identity of long necked sea serpents and lake serpents. Morgawr the Cornish monster, Champ of Lake Champlain, the Lukwata of Lake Victoria, and Nessie of Scotland are known for having long necks.
DeleteIs it possible for a long necked Cetacean to exist, or a long necked Dolphin or Whale? The extinct Zeuglodons had an entire body that was snake like, so why not a Cetacean with a long snake like neck?
Author Bernard Heuvelmans also speculates that a long necked Sirenian(Manatees) could be the identity of some of these aquatic long necked cryptids of the sea and in lakes. That's not likely because Sirenians are peaceful herbivores while these unidentified long necked aquatic cryptids are described as being carnivorous and with an aggressive streak. A long necked Cetacean makes more sense, and maybe an unknown Mammal in an order of its own or an unknown Reptile in an order of its own could be the identity of these cryptids. A long necked eel is also possible. I don't believe that a catfish could be the identity for any of these long necked cryptids.
Finally, Plesiosaurs could be the identity to these long neck cryptids in both sea and in lakes. Plesiosaurs could have survived extinction. If Tuataras, Crocodiles, Turtles, and the Coelacanth still exist today, then why not the Plesiosaur? Only time will tell what they are.