Loch Ness
A view of the Loch Ness Monster, near Inverness, Scotland, April 19, 1934. The photograph, one of two pictures known as the 'surgeon's photographs,' was allegedly taken by Colonel Robert Kenneth Wilson, though it was later exposed as a hoax by one of the participants, Chris Spurling, who, on his deathbed, revealed that the pictures were staged by himself, Marmaduke and Ian Wetherell, and Wilson.Keystone/Getty Images

A tourist who visited Loch Ness Highlands, Scotland has apparently captured the visuals of a 20-feet object lurking across the waters, and it has made many people believe that Loch Ness Monsters are real. The bizarre video shot from the shores of Loch Ness shows a long, black object traveling across the lake at a startling speed.

"I lay back sunbathing with a friend on the beach, having lots of laughs. Then as the day went on, we looked at the water and saw something unusual. It looked about 20-feet long and kept going up and down, so I turned my camera video. We couldn't believe what we were seeing! It came right round as you can see in the video and then passed to the right of us in the water where I could no longer see it. It was actually amazing whatever it was, it was big," said the eyewitness.

The eyewitness also ruled out the possibility of this object being a boat traveling across the water. As per the eyewitness, he had shot the visuals in June, and at that time, the waters were quite calm, and there were no boats traveling across.

A video describing the eerie sighting was later uploaded to YouTube by conspiracy theory channel 'Spectral Wolfpack Paranormal'. The video uploaded by the channel soon went viral, and audiences put forward various theories explaining the bizarre sighting.

"Its something moving and snake-like, gotta be Nessie, no waves at all, just from the beast," commented David Sisneroz, a YouTube user.

"I don't think it looks like Waves, I believe its some type of animal, or an object," commented Christy Chaney, another YouTuber.

The new sighting came just a few months after a Gloucester IT employee filmed the video of a Loch Ness-like figure in a canal. After capturing the video on May 29, the IT employee soon sent it to his friends, and most of them blatantly concluded that the giant monster described in Scottish folklore is a reality.