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Sea serpent

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Sea serpents are a kind of sea monster either wholly or partly serpentine. Sightings have been reported for hundreds of years, and recent work by Bruce Champagne indicates that there have been 1200 or more all told. Sea serpents have been seen from both ship and shore, and by multiple persons at once, groups that sometimes count scientists among their number. Despite the numerous sightings, though, no credible physical evidence has been recorded and it is uncertain whether or not the serpents actually exist.

A sea serpent from Olaus Magnus' book History of the Northern Peoples (1555).
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A sea serpent from Olaus Magnus' book History of the Northern Peoples (1555).

Ancient history

In Norse mythology, Jörmungandr, or "Midgardsormen" (Midgard was, according to Snorre Sturlason the part of the world where humans lived). "Midgardsormen" was the child of the jotun-turned-good Loki and his wife Angrboda, whose name meant "the one who predict sorrow". They had two more children; Fenrisulfr and Hel, ruler of the Underworld. Often anglicized as Jormungand, the creature was a sea serpent so long that it encircled the entire world; stories were told of how sailors would mistake its back for a chain of islands. Sea serpents also appear frequently in later Scandinavian folklore, particularly in that of Norway.

In Swedish ecclesiastic and writer Olaus Magnus's Carta marina, many marine monsters of varied form, including an immense sea serpent, appear. Moreover, in his 1555 work History of the Northern Peoples, Magnus gives the following description of a Norwegian sea serpent:

Those who sail up along the coast of Norway to trade or to fish, all tell the remarkable story of how a serpent of fearsome size, 200 feet long and 20 feet wide, resides in rifts and caves outside Bergen. On bright summer nights this serpent leaves the caves to eat calves, lambs and pigs, or it fares out to the sea and feeds on sea nettles, crabs and similar marine animals. It has ell-long hair hanging from its neck, sharp black scales and flaming red eyes. It attacks vessels, grabs and swallows people, as it lifts itself up like a column from the water.

The Daedalus sea serpent of 1848
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The Daedalus sea serpent of 1848

Recent history and notable cases

In the 19th century there were several major sea serpent sightings on the Gloucester and Maine coasts of New England; these spawned several rather silly mix-ups. On August 18, 1817, for example, a meeting of the New England Linnaean Society went so far as to give a deformed terrestrial snake the name Scoliophis atlanticus (thinking it was the juvenile form of a sea serpent that had recently been seen nearby). Another time a prankster who had caught a tuna claimed that it was really a sea serpent. More serious sightings from the same place and time have since been classified as Many-Humped Serpents, Classic Sea Serpents, or Type 3 animals (see classification systems). Skeptical suggestions for the sightings include giant squid, misidentified snakes, or a wave phenomenon.

The most famous sea serpent sighting is probably that made by the men and officers of HMS Daedalus in August, 1848 during a voyage to Saint Helena in the South Atlantic; the creature they saw, some 60 feet long, held a peculiar maned head above the water. The sighting caused quite a stir in the London papers, and Sir Richard Owen, the famous English biologist, proclaimed the beast an elephant seal. The Daedalus serpent has since been classified as a Super Eel or Type 2C' animal. Another skeptical suggestion for the sighting proposed that it was actually an upside down canoe, or a posing giant squid.

Another sighting took place in 1905 off the coast of Brazil. The crew of the Valhalla and two naturalists, Michael J. Nicoll and E. G. B. Meade-Waldo, saw a long-necked, turtle headed creature, with a large dorsal fin.It has since been classified as a Super Eel or Type 4B. A skeptical suggestion is that the sighting was of a posing giant squid.

Sea serpent sightings continue today, with reports coming in from the Pacific Northwest and California; the most notable of recent occurrences is the alleged filming of sea serpents by the brothers Bill and Bob Clark in San Francisco bay. In October 2004, the giant squid, long associated with sea monsters and perhaps the source of many mistaken sightings, was for the first time [caught on video] off the Bonin Islands, revealing for the first time the appearance in life of this "cousin" of sea serpents.

Misidentifications?

Skeptics and debunkers have time and again questioned the authenticity of sightings, putting forward in place of serpents cetaceans, sea snakes, eels, basking sharks, baleen whales, oarfish, large pinnipeds, seaweed, driftwood, flocks of birds, and giant squid as the creature or creatures seen (see Notable Cases, above, on giant squid).

While most Cryptozoologists recognize that at least some reports are simple misidentifications, they point out that many of the creatures described by those who have seen them look nothing like the known species put forward by skeptics and claim that certain reports stick out. For their part, the skeptics remain unconvinced, time and again pointing out that imagination has a way of twisting and inflating the slightly out-of-the-ordinary until it becomes extraordinary.

Classification systems

Cryptozoologists may further argue for the existence of sea serpents by pointing out that people see similar things, and it is possible for them to classify the different "types". While there have been different classification attempts with different results, they all share several common characteristics.

Bruce Champagne

The Type 2A sea serpent according to Cameron McCormick. Drawn July, 2005.
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The Type 2A sea serpent according to Cameron McCormick. Drawn July, 2005.

External links

Sources

See also

 


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