Loch Ness is perhaps best known for the sightings of the fabled monster, "Nessie", the Loch Ness monster, although it is scenic in its own right. Boat cruises operate from various locations along its shores giving tourists the chance to look for the monster.
It also acts as the lower storage reservoir for the Foyers pumped-storage hydroelectric scheme, which was the first of its kind in Britain. The turbines were originally used to provide power for a nearby mill, but now electricity is generated and supplied to the National Grid[?].
At its southwestern end, near Fort Augustus, several Crannogs (artificial islands generally from the Iron Age) have been created or improvised on a shallow shelf.
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