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Mercury
02-11-2012, 05:22 AM
8OmyyHyya64



A video of a “lake monster” has appeared on Icelandic media.

The object in the water is shown swimming against the prevailing current in the river.

http://www.cryptomundo.com/wp-content/uploads/r-ICELANDIC-CREATURE-large570.jpg

http://www.cryptomundo.com/wp-content/uploads/r-ICELANDIC-CREATURE-large570.jpg

The footage was captured by Hjörtur Kjerúlf on February 2, 2012, of this unknown found swimming in the glacial river Jökulsá í Fljótsdal, east Iceland. Speculation has centered on whether this may be the “notorious snake-like monster Lagarfljótsormurinn, which is said to reside in the lake Lagarfljót,” according to the Iceland Review.

Frankly, this video shows something that looks like a constructed snake-like object, with rigid sections, being propelled through the water.

From the movement on the water’s surface, it would have to be something other than a mammal, like a giant worm, a reptile or a fish. The head appears to have been made to look like it belongs to a giant anaconda. The sections do not gracefully flow, but are sectionally moving from side-to-side. Mammals move up and down.

The traditional sightings of this lake’s “monster” (going back to 1345) are not “snake-like” as the media is noting. Instead, they describe Lagarfljótsormurinn as having a hump, a long neck, and whiskers, more like a long-necked Waterhorse than a giant snake.

It seems someone attempting this fakery, perhaps by using a robot with tarps, fish nets, or trash bags (a favorite for watery hoaxers), has decided to take the phrase “Sea Serpent” and/or “Worm” too literally. The 21st Century-employed phrase “Iceland Worm Monster” comes from a misunderstanding and mistranslation of Lagarfljótsormurinn simply as Lagarfljót worm, instead of the more correct Lagarfljót Würm or Wurm, harking back to an overlapping folklore for and with Dragons, definitely cryptids with much more bulk than wispy earthbound “worms.”

I’ve been out of it, due to some medical difficulties, so I may have missed others coming up with similar theories, as apparently Dale Drinnon did. Also, over at Boing Boing, David Perscovitz posted about this here.

Lee Speigel wrote about this video on Huffington Post (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/07/icelands-loch-ness-worm-monster_n_1260467.html), and included highlights of his extended interview with me about the tape.

Looks natural to me. Like debris floating in the water.