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Serpents In The Waters Of Time: Historical Accounts Of Sea Serpentry

Saturday, August 4, 2012 5:34
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(Before It's News)

 

Aug 2nd in Cryptozoology by

Even in modern times, stories of sea monsters fascinate us and taunt our minds with incredible possibilities. Could it be that tremendous reptiles–dinosaurs, in essence–could still exist on our planet, and inhabit the darkened waters of our ocean’s depths?

A classic story related by the marine scientist Lionel Walford in 1963 would indicate that something along these lines appears to be the case. In July of the aforementioned year, Walford and his company claimed to have seen a 50-foot-long, undulating serpent-like creature, observed as it swam near the surface only a few miles off the New York shoreline. “It resembled a transparent sea monster. It looked so much like jelly. I could see no bones and no eyes, nose, or mouth. But there it was, undulating along, looking as if it were almost made of fluid glass.”

What was the creature that Walford and his crew had seen? In many ways, the translucent quality the animal possessed is reminiscent of what are known as leptocephalus, the scientific name for eel larvae. However, the larvae form of the eel is never known to grow to such great sizes, let alone the parent animal when fully grown. In other instances, the animals are far more serpentine in both color as well as appearance, the likes of which we often find in historical accounts that leave us wondering whether dinosaurs might not actually exist in our very midst.

 

Looking all the way back to 1639, in what is believed by many to be the very first sighting of an alleged sea serpent in the New World, a large serpentine beast was said to have been seen gliding through the waters off the coast of Cape Ann, Massachusetts. If this story is to be believed, it is of particular significance in terms of the snake vs eel argument, since witness accounts of the Beast of Cape Ann record that the animal was not only seen swimming, but soon also approached land, where it was said to have slithered onto the shore and coiled itself, very much like a snake.

This would not be the last appearance of Cape Ann’s great serpent, though the creature apparently kept a low profile for close to two centuries before making a series of widely publicized appearances in the area in August of 1817. The printing operation owned by Henry Bowen of Devonshire Street, Boston, carried the story initially, citing that “A Monstrous Sea Serpent, The largest ever seen in America, has just made its appearance in Gloucester Harbour, Cape Ann, and has been seen by hundreds of Respectable Citizens.” Initial reports chalked the sighting up to merely being sharks or dolphins swimming in formation, but later corroboration from fishermen in the area seemed to confirm that the beast witnessed by so many was indeed some very large variety of serpent, and that the animal carries its head some eight feet out of the water, which is colored partly black and partly white (perhaps the creature’s underbelly, extending up to the lower jaw, had been a lighter color, like many snakes). The crearure was also described as being quite formidable, and able to dart about and move very quickly, in addition to its ability to change directions with incredible ease while swimming about. The closest witnesses to the beast, who managed to attain a frightening fifteen yards or less, said it was approximately the width of a large barre, with an overall length nearing as much as 100 feet.

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