Those who have seen the monster says that it resembles the "Champ" of New York/Vermont. Some people claim to have seen more than one Mussie creating a doubt of whether it is a single animal or a species. It was the best and convincing evidence till now. 28. Yacumama. One theory is that it may have descended from dinosaurs who hid out in caves that were then flooded when the lake was created with a new dam. Famous surgeon R. Kenneth Wilson published the images of Loch Ness Monster. These folklores have been told from generation to another and have been used to either correct bad behavior or promote good behavior among children. Similar to the Loch Ness Monster, Lake Champlain in North America has its own sea monster to contend with. These are ten sea monsters from around the world. Reports of the buffalo-like monster were first reported in 1903 when it was alleged that it attacked a group of people and shot six times before it retreated to the lake.
10. In fact, there are hundreds (by some counts thousands) of lakes across the globe said to harbor monsters. Attempts to capture the creature have been futile, but the animal has become part of the culture and a major tourists’ attraction.Along the trail leading to Lake Memphremagog in Quebec, Canada, visitors are advised to watch out for Memphre. "Chessie" is a sea monster in an American folklore that inhabits the Chesapeake Bay. Still, the possibility that such a monster is dragging poor swimmers down on a fatal plunge seems unlikely, particularly as Lake Thunderbird is manmade with no inlets. The current legend of the Mussie was developed in 1916 but records dating back to the early seventeenth century suggest that the legends told of spoke of a monster resembling the Mussie. In 2005 several people claimed to have seen the serpent although no authentic evidence was ever produced.For years monsters have existed in folklore. There’s also the famed Champ of Lake Champlain, possibly the most famous of American lake monsters, and the Lake Dillon monster in Wyoming that some think is being suppressed by a secret society.
The half-man, half-goat animal was believed to be dwelling in the lake, but the deft swimmer wasn’t afraid to climb up on land and antagonize the people there.
As the deepest lake in the United States, Crater Lake unsurprisingly has its own water-monster legend. The legend of "Selma" dates back to the 18th century, and it is thought that it began when a young girl recording a video of her parent in the lake captures the serpent on camera. Mostly this has been livestock. These are ten sea monsters from around the world.