Breaking News: Nahuelito Photographed

Cryptozoologist Scott Corrales of Inexplicata is sharing that the latest photographs of a famed Lake Monster of Argentina has surfaced on April 15, 2006.

Giving as a source El Cordillerano Edicion of Argentina for Monday, April 17, 2006, the article translated is "The Latest Photo of Lake Nahuel Huapi Monster." Here’s Corrales’ text, from Spanish to English:

Photos were left behind by anonymous reader at the newsroom

The man came to our newsroom, spoke to the receptionist and left her an envelope with three photos and a note that read: "This is not a tree trunk with a capricious shape. This is not a wave. Nahuelito showed his face. Lake Nahuel Huapi, Saturday, April 15, 9 a.m. I’m not giving my personal information to avoid future headaches." We are presenting the images. Let each one reach his/her own conclusions.

This translation is copyrighted 2006 Scott Corrales, with special thanks to Ricardo Lopez Rende.

The creature of Nahuel Huapi Lake in Argentina and Patagonia is called Nahuelito. This cryptid is sometimes referred to as the Patagonian plesiosaur, the story of which first attracted press coverage in the 1920s, though sightings date back well into the previous century. Please see here, pages 119-121 and 294-295, for more on the sightings of Nahuelito.

See below, the two photographs.

Nahuelito

Nahuelito

2 Responses

  1. Loren Coleman
    Loren Coleman April 17, 2006 at 2:56 pm |

    Excellent comments. I didn’t want to bias people with my opinion. But I couldn’t agree with you more!

  2. Loren Coleman
    Loren Coleman May 4, 2006 at 5:43 am |

    Scott Corrales’s information dissemination is extremely appreciated here. His opening of the door to Hispanic America has been a godsend for trying to get news from a formerly routinely inaccessible but important and growing population of folks with a rising interest in cryptozoology. Thanks to Scott Corrales for the gateway.

    What people do with the information, and what it pans out to be is not anyone’s blame. Let us not kill the messenger.

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