A couple of months ago, sea treasure hunters stumbled upon something that totally freaked them out. While out looking for ancient sea wrecks, they stumbled upon something far more wild. A round saucer.
The object is the diameter of a Boeing 747, has rectangular edges in it (straight lines) and appears to have been moving quite fast when hitting the sea floor, as it made a birm in the floor with its body work, showing movement and coming to a stop.
A smaller disc is near it.
I blew up the sonar scan and enhanced it and I believe it is quite old now and rotten away as it appears that the hull is now gone, perhaps a metal that cannot withstand the sea and eroded. You can see what looks like alot of parts in it, like giant tanks, ribs, etc.
Diameter is about 224 feet or 68 meters.
Could this be the object related to the sky explosion incident over Siberia that claimed a massive amount of forest area? The explosion or down draft was severe, flattening out tons of forest. Perhaps this thing was going so fast, it hit the atmosphere and finally came to rest in the Baltic sea. Were this theory correct, this would be 120+ years old from the point of impact, and who knows how old the airframe? was before it crashed....
Interesting, eh?
The object is the diameter of a Boeing 747, has rectangular edges in it (straight lines) and appears to have been moving quite fast when hitting the sea floor, as it made a birm in the floor with its body work, showing movement and coming to a stop.
A smaller disc is near it.
I blew up the sonar scan and enhanced it and I believe it is quite old now and rotten away as it appears that the hull is now gone, perhaps a metal that cannot withstand the sea and eroded. You can see what looks like alot of parts in it, like giant tanks, ribs, etc.
Diameter is about 224 feet or 68 meters.
Could this be the object related to the sky explosion incident over Siberia that claimed a massive amount of forest area? The explosion or down draft was severe, flattening out tons of forest. Perhaps this thing was going so fast, it hit the atmosphere and finally came to rest in the Baltic sea. Were this theory correct, this would be 120+ years old from the point of impact, and who knows how old the airframe? was before it crashed....
Interesting, eh?