When the researchers searched for the nearest unidentified object (UFO) on the bottom of the Baltic Sea, all of their electronics suddenly became active.
In June 2011, Peter Lindberg, an explorer who made a living excavating treasure from a shipwreck on the seabed in Sweden, and his colleagues discovered the wreck of a wine ship at a depth of about 90 meters below bottom. the bottom of the Baltic Sea. The plane, which is about a century old, was sunk by the German navy during World War I. While using sonar equipment to search for precious champagne in the wreck, the expedition team found a large circular object that appeared on the device’s screen.
Recently Lindberg and 12 colleagues, including an expert in sonar, decided to return to the location of the foreign object to determine its origin. The latest images on the screen of the ultrasound device show the cylindrical object with a distance of 60 meters, CNN reported.
Stephan Hogerborn, a professional diver in the group, told NDTV television channel that the crew members’ cameras and satellite phones were constantly active as they swam above the cylindrical object. They become active again when they swim away.
“We swam to a position about 200 meters from the object and restarted the electronics. Then we moved over the object and the devices were listed again,” Hogerborn said.
Dennis Asberg, another member of the crew, commented that the object could be the first.
“It could be a meteorite, a volcano, a secret base from the Cold War. It could even be an extraterrestrial flying saucer,” Asberg commented.
Lindberg’s team will dive into the UFO’s location on the bottom of the Baltic Sea next time in the next few weeks, Gizmodo said.