Monster of Lake Brosno
Loch Ness Monster Has a Relative
in Russian Province 01/20/2004 16:12
http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/94/377/11844_monster.html
Hundreds of publications and TV programs about the Brosno monster
made the creature a world sensation
The weekly Karavan+Ya (Caravan+Me) published in the Russian city
of Tver became widely popular seven years ago when it was first
to report about a monster from Lake Brosno in the Andreapol District
of the Tver Region. After the first publication in the weekly,
the news about a dinosaur from Brosno spread all over the world.
Journalists from Moscow and from abroad were seeking sensational
publications about the monster from the Russian province. Hundreds
of publications and TV programs about the Brosno monster made
the creature a world sensation. The Tver weekly Karavan from
time to time organizes small expeditions to Lake Brosno to visit
the mysterious creature that became so much popular thanks to
the newspaper. Numerous witnesses say that they saw a head of a big beast above
water that looked like a dinosaur or a dragon head and a long thin
tail. The people said that the creature was covered with scales
like a reptile and was about five meters long.
Experts of the Kosmopoisk research association went for an expedition
to Lake Brosno together with Karavan in the summer of 2002 and
did echo deep sounding. Vadim Chernobrov, the Kosmopoisk coordinator
said in an interview to the Moscow newspaper Argumenty i Facty
(Arguments and Facts): "Echo deep sounding registered an anomaly.
There was a huge jelly-like mass of a railway car size handing
five meters above the bottom. The mass stood motionless. We waited
for some time and then decided to make it move: we threw an underwater
petard, a low capacity explosive device. When the device blew up,
the creature started slowly going up. We starred at the water,
and it was clear; there was nothing resembling a monster, however
something unusual was still felt in the lake water."
Researchers, who believe that a mysterious big creature does
live in Lake Brosno and who work on the mystery of the creature,
say that Brosnya (this is the name given to the monster) cannot
be a reptile. Otherwise, it would be frozen and died in the climate
of the middle geographic zone when dormant. If the strange creature
has come to life, it means it is a mammal and breeds through
syngenesis. However, some problems arise in this connection.
First of all, the lake is too small for an entire population
of large predators to live and breed there. Second, a group of
these big mysterious creatures needs much food, which is also
a problem in the small lake. There is a hypothesis saying that
some water systems join lakes, seas and oceans. If so, Scotland's
Nessy may be a relative to Brosnya living in Russia's province.
It is rumored that the strange giant creature has been living
the Lake Brosno for several centuries already. One of the legends
says that the lake monster scared to death the Tatar-Mongol army
that headed for Novgorod in the 8th century. Baty-khan stopped
the troops to have some rest on the sides of Lake Brosno. Horses
were let to drink water from the lake. However, when horses came
down to the lake, a huge creature emerged from the water roaring
and started devouring horses and soldiers. The Baty-khan troops
were so terrified that they turned back, and Novgorod was saved.
Old legends say that some enormous mouth devoured fishermen. Chronicles
mention some "sand mountain" that emerged above the lake
surface from time to time. Once, Varangians wanted to hide stolen
treasures in the lake. But when they approached the small island,
a dragon came to the surface from the lake and swallowed the small
island up.
The terrible monster disturbed people's minds over the 18-19th
century. It was rumored that the giant creature emerged on the
lake surface in the evenings, but immediately submerged when people
approached. It is said that during WWII the beast swallowed up
a Fascist plane. Today, there are lots of witnesses who say they
chanced to see Brosnya walking in the water. People say that it
turns boats upside-down and has to do with disappearance of people.
Everything said by locals and tourists who witnessed Brosnya proves
that the creature (either a dragon or a dinosaur) does exist. However,
some people treat the issue skeptically and still say that the
creature may be a mutant beaver or a giant pike of 100-150 years.
Others conjecture that groups of wild boars and elks cross the
lake from time to time. Do boars and elks dive and stay under water
for a long time? However, local people witnessed neither boars,
nor elks.
There are some more scientific hypotheses concerning Brosnya.
One of them is a gas version saying that when hydrogen sulphide
goes up from the lake bottom it makes water boil up; this boiling
in its turn resembles a dragon head. But the amount of hydrogen
sulphide must be considerable to produce this effect. Other version
says that there is a volcano in Lake Brosno that makes ejections
on the water surface from time to time. It is well-known that there
are several fractures at the bottom of the lake, the depth and
the direction of the fractures cannot be defined. It is not ruled
out that the volcano crater is inside of one of the fractures.
This explains why the volcano, if it actually exists, has not been
discovered yet.
Fishermen say that the underwater world of Lake Brosno has a structure
of several levels. From time to time burbots and perchs can be
found in the lake. This is strange at all that some sorts of fish
can be found in the area at all. For example, herring can be found
in a lake in Peno District in the Tver Region. This is strange
that the sea fish may live in the lake at all. Smelt shoals from
time to time can be found in Lake Brosno as well. The phenomenon
of Brosnya can be explained from the physical point of view: huge
smelt shoals are reflected on the water surface through refraction
of light and produces the effect of a huge reptile head. Physicists
say that any mirage appears in hot weather. Indeed, witnesses say
that they came across Brosnya in summer. However, origin of the
strange monster is still a mystery.
In November 1996, the Karavan weekly started an expedition to
Lake Brosno in the Tver Region. The expedition consisted of writer
and journalist from Tver Yeugeny Novikov, head of the Tver Regional
Legislative Assembly's press-service Nikolay Ishchuk, journalist
Marina Gavrishenko, photographer Anaida Jilavyan and editor-in-chief
of the Karavan newspaper Gennady Klimov. In seven years after that
expedition, we would like to know whether the people believe that
the creature actually exists.
Gennady Klimov says: "The lake actually keeps some secret.
When the depth of Lake Brosno was measured, it turned out that
in some parts it was 120-160 meters deep. It means that Lake Brosno
is the deepest in Europe. What is more, the lake belongs to the
preglacial epoch that is why mysterious phenomena are quite possible
in it. As for me, my concerns about the whole of the story are
quite particular. I am interested in the mechanism according to
which global myths arise. I say that the administration of the
Andreapol District where the lake is situated could have been more
adroit to form economy of the district depending upon the Brosnya
myth. Today, I do not personally care if the creature exists or
not. But this is a really precious myth from the point of view
of the future. Much is spoken about monster called Brosnya in different
parts of Russia and in other countries, but nothing is said here
in the Tver Region where the creature "lives". It is
believed that Loch Ness creature does exist. The whole of the county
where is lives is connected with the creature myth. The nature
here in the Tver Region is wonderful and pure. There is a unique
technology of making and using myths. These technologies will be
extremely important in the future."
Marina Gavrishenko, the journalist who took part in the expedition
says: "At first sight, the whole of the monster story looks
like a fairytale. After the expedition to Lake Brosno, I do believe
that the place is actually mysterious. Stories told by witnesses
prove this opinion. We met with local people who were perfectly
sane and adequate. What is more, all legends about the mysterious
monster trace the roots back to the old times. I am sure that legends
and rumors cannot arise from nothing."
Nikolay Ishchuk, the head of the Tver Regional Legislative Assembly
press-service says: "I do not believe in wonders. What we
chanced to see at Lake Brosno is actually mysterious and incomprehensible.
If the phenomenon can be explained with the laws of the planet's
life, I believe this is a miracle indeed. I recollect our expedition
to Lake Brosno and our attempts to take pictures of the creature
as a wonderful journey. This is wonderful that people may have
such interesting adventures. May it be so that the expedition actually
came across some miracle? Inexplicable things must exist in this
world. When people do not understand some things they want to know
more and reveal more new facts."
Material prepared by
Sofya Vorotyntseva
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