Our anscestors, I forget the scientific name, wiped out their anscestors nearly to extinction
[/b]
so we did with the dodo, your point?
Because they are HARD TO FIND.... dumbshit.
[/b]
hey if dodos were hard to find, how'd we know about them now? People have actually gone out of their way to document this creature.
We have only explored something like under 5% of the ocean, and most boats never go off their shipping routes, which animals would avoid.
[/b]hey, if scientists and explorers minded their own business, we wouldn't have discovered half the animals we know today.
Do you carry a camera or a camcorder with you all the time?
[/b]
nope, but i bet HOAXERS do
Any deep water, or places off the shipping routes.
[/b]
if plessies lived in deep water, they wouldn't have a blow hole. And marine mammals stay near the surface or in the middle of oceans and seas. Marine mammals aren't considered fish, that they can go live in deep water. Else they'd run out of oxygen before even getting to the surface to breath. (someone did mention blowholes). and plus it depends how far off shipping routes, because sonars can detect those animals.
interesting how all these serpants are found in lakes, so im presuming hoaxers use them as reference for their made up encounters, but then again...
theres a possibility of finding these docile creatures, its just idiots and the mentally unstable do anything to prove they actually do exist. If you want these magnificent creatures to be sighted, people need to stop taking advantage of them, and actually go look for them. some people have gone hunting them, and all came out unsuccessful.
its true, that these plessies might have undergone evolutionary changes, so thats why maybe they can hide from the 'naked' eye.
You proved your own theory wrong by losing.
[/b]
as opposed to losing because you and holk said so?
Once again, it comes back to the underwater tunnels that they would probably use to get into the loch for mating purposes, and the fact that EXTREME SONAR all through the loch would make them get out as fast as possible.
[/b]
most marine mammals can't resist the sound of extreme sonar, or generally just sonar, because it irritates their blowholes (if any), and thus, it forces them to be stranded on shores, and they can walk back, but if they were to be stranded, theres a high possibility of near by residents spotting them.