Sea serpent In July 1900, newspaper reports carried reports that on the evening of 14 July 1899, the steamboat Otetiani, carrying several dozen passengers, encountered a 25-foot-long A report sometime later in the
Geneva Gazette suggested that the incident was a hoax. and is unfurled to the left, which is never portrayed that way for exhibition. Some older paintings located on the bottom of the cliff were done somewhat earlier, for tourists on Seneca Lake boat tours, who were given the mythology that they had been done in 1779 after the Senecas escaped from the Sullivan Campaign. Historian Barbara Bell, has cleared this up in her 2005 book.
Seneca Guns Seneca Lake is also the site of strange and currently unexplained cannon-like booms and shakes that are heard and felt in the surrounding area. They are known locally as the Seneca Guns, Lake Drums, or Lake Guns, and these types of phenomena are known elsewhere as
skyquakes. The term
lake guns originated in the short story "
The Lake Gun" by
James Fenimore Cooper in 1851. While there is no explanation that takes into account sounds the Iroquois heard before Cooper's time, it is possible sonic booms have been mistaken for natural sounds in modern days. ==Sampson Navy and Air Force bases==