Coelacanths: the fish that 'outdid' the Loch Ness Monster 
By Emily Osterloff UK Source: nhm 12/13/2020
Emily Osterloff
The unexpected capture of a living coelacanth in the 1930s was 'the most sensational natural history discovery' of the century.
 

In April 1939, New Zealand's Auckland Star proclaimed that the Loch Ness monster, a sensation that had caught the world's attention not long prior, had been 'outdone'.

Making up for the world's disappointment that there wasn't a prehistoric creature living in a Scottish loch was the South African discovery of a strange, steel blue fish with limb-like fins.

The fish was a coelacanth, one of a group that was thought to have gone extinct 70 million years earlier. But this one was alive.

 
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