Talk:Lake Dardanelle

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Big fish story[edit]

I'm amazed that our normally sharp-eyed viewers have let the apparent hoax below remain without at least a comment for nearly a week. Equally amazing, when I tried to find a more legitimate news source than the one cited, I could find none. The source, Rock City News, admits that it is a spoof site (on another site) and even says that it is "...Arkansas' most unreliable source." Humor has its place, but not masquerading as fact in Wikipedia. Whoever put this on Wikipedia should not be allowed to edit, at least without adult supervision! In my opinion, this is simply another form of vandalism. Bruin2 (talk) 00:41, 1 October 2018 (UTC)[reply]

<Indent>

Lake Beast (Removed from main article)[edit]

In August 2014 it was announced by the Pope County Sheriff's Department that on Friday, August 8th a man had been swallowed by a beast in Lake Dardanelle, a quarter mile from the shore near Lakefront Drive. The attack occurred early in the morning and was witnessed by a fisherman and his wife, though the victim could not could not be identified due to a lack of recoverable remains. Park officials, law enforcement, and local residents were baffled by the incident, though Park Manager Rebecca Valentine speculated that, "the only animal I can imagine in the lake that grows big enough to eat a man would be a catfish that just sat in a deep area and grew to enormous size.” Others have suggested that the beast may in fact be a mutated snake, irradiated by the nearby Arkansas Nuclear One power plant, and according to local historians, the area flooded by the creation of Lake Dardanelle is known to have many old houses, even mine shafts where a large creature could theoretically hide. Some leaders within the local Christian community have also interpreted the attack as a sign from God, drawing comparisons to the Biblical story of Jonah and claiming that the attack is a sign of God's frustration with the construction of an Islamic center in Russellville.[1]

A second victim, an unidentified woman, is reported to have been killed by the creature.

The following month a third incident was reported in which four men, armed with two rifles, a shotgun, and a harpoon gun, were attacked while hunting for the creature on the evening of September 12th near Bakers Creek. According to Russellville Police Department Public Information Officer Drew Latch, the men lured in the beast using several baked hams. One of the survivors, David Sarvis of Pottsville, reported to police that a thick fog began to develop over the lake later that evening and they could hear the creature moving in the water, but were unable to see it through the mist. The beast is then reported to have overturned their boat, throwing three of the men five feet away and causing the group to lose their weapons. One of the men, identified as Mark Thompson of Russellville, was trapped under the boat and died after the beast pulled him and the boat under the waves. The three survivors then swam to shore, calling 911 on a cellular phone after reaching their vehicles. Although the boat was found broken into several pieces at the bottom of Bakers Creek, divers were unable to locate the beast or the victim's remains.[2]

Despite the combined efforts of the Russellville Police Department, the Pope County Sheriff's Department, and the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, the creature, dubbed "Dardan" by Mayor Bill Eaton of Russellville, remains at large and has yet to be killed, captured, or identified. The attacks are not believed to be connected to alligator sightings in the area. </Indent>

References