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A bone in the Loch Ness
Gerald McSorley holds up a Jurassic fossil, clearly showing four prefectly preserved vertebrae, complete with spinal cord and blood vessels, which he found on the shores of Loch Ness, at his home in Stirling in Scotland. Though experts have stressed that the find is not related to the original Loch Ness monster ? the remains of the plesiosaur (a long-necked, carnivorous sea reptile) are around 150 million years old and Loch Ness did not exist until the last Ice Age around 12,000 years ago ? they say the find is evidence that the 35-foot-long creature once existed in the area.
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