26 May 2010

Kraken & Co

In preparation for a talking head gig on a TVNZ documentary next week I've been looking at items that delight the alfoil beanie crowd. A friend has kindly pointed me to a UK Press Association item from the Royal Navy, denying that there's a central repository of reports about kraken and other sea monsters -
The Royal Navy may hold records about possible sea monsters but it does not collect them centrally, it has been revealed.

Sailors can note unusual sightings on the ocean waves in their ship's logs, the Navy said.

But they are not required to do so and none of the information is assembled in a central archive devoted to sea monsters.

Any sightings of strange marine animals reported to the Navy by the public are passed on to the UK Hydrographic Office, which provides charts and other navigational services for mariners.
So much for the fins n tentacles version of the X Files.

The item on "the Navy's policy on giant creatures of the deep" is attributed to an FOI request by a marine biologist seeking information regarding undisclosed records about "abnormally large or dangerous sea monsters hundreds of metres under the sea". If you're a conspiracist any denial by The Forces of Darkness or their dupes (ie the RN) mean nothing, alas, so the response is unlikely to deter the true believers.
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."