The Royal Navy has dealt a blow to monster enthusiasts - saying that while it may have some records of reported sea monster sightings, it doesn't collect them centrally or track monster activity.
Details of the Navy's policy on the issue of giant submarine creatures emerged in response to a Freedom of Information (FoI) request from a marine biologist. The biologist inquired whether the Ministry of Defence held records about 'abnormally large or dangerous sea monsters hundreds of metres under the sea' that had not been revealed to the public.
In reply an official wrote: 'The RN (Royal Navy), and MoD in general, does not maintain any form of central repository of information purely devoted to sea monsters.
'Personnel might be inclined to record unusual sightings in ship's logs but there is, as far as we know, no actual requirement for them to do so, and it would be beyond the resource constraints of an FoI request to check every line of every RN log book for any such references since 2005.
'However, the RN does invite people to report sightings of marine mammals, and it's possible this could include unusual sightings. These are forwarded to the UK Hydrographic Office at Taunton.'
The UK Hydrographic Office provides charts and other navigational services for mariners. The MoD's carefree stance on sea monsters contrasts with the policy on UFOs it maintained for more than 50 years. Thousands of reports of strange sights in the skies were recorded by the military's UFO investigation unit, until it was shut down on December 1 last year.
Dr David Clarke, an expert in unexplained phenomena, said the Navy showed an interest in sea monsters in the 19th century. The National Archives in Kew, west London, contain several historic Royal Navy files about strange sightings on the oceans, he said.
These include an 1830 report sent to the Admiralty in London by the captain of the ship Rob Roy about a 'great thundering big sea snake' measuring about 129ft long seen by his crew in the waters near the remote island of St Helena in the South Atlantic. Another file records how Commander George Harrington, captain of the Castilian, saw 'a monster of extraordinary length' rear its head out of the sea, again near St Helena, in 1857.
Dr Clarke, a lecturer in journalism at Sheffield Hallam University, said the MoD would argue that it was only funded for defence and not to investigate strange phenomena.
'They should be recording those kind of things, but I don't think anybody is recording them,' he said. 'It's short-sightedness - but that's bureaucracy.'
/Metro.co.uk/