Is the UFO under the Baltic Sea just a rock?

Based on the analysis of rock samples taken from strange objects with a diameter of more than 60m and rising from the sea floor near 4m under the Baltic Sea, Swedish geology professor said that this strange object is just a normal rock.

>>>UFO under the Baltic Sea is Nazi weapon?

Since being discovered in the Baltic Sea in May 2011, the mystery of strange objects has always fascinated people interested in it.

There are many explanations about objects found by Swedish Ocean-X divers. Some consider it a UFO, while others claim it is a Nazi anti-submarine device or even a door to the underground world.

Picture 1 of Is the UFO under the Baltic Sea just a rock?
Strange objects under the Baltic Sea are just a rock?

But according to expert Volker Brüchert, professor of geology at Stockholm University, Sweden, who has just had a handful of rocks of this object, this strange object is no different from the rocks on the river. The tape was pulled down to the bottom of the sea.

'Hearing the critical views about the mystery of this strange object is necessary. What Ocean-X's expedition team had overlooked was that almost all of the rock samples they brought up from the seabed were granite, gon, or sandstone. These are the usual rock patterns in glaciers, and the Batic Sea is formed by glaciers long ago, ' he told LiveScience.

The group of divers gave Professor Brüchert a sample of soft basalt, which was formed from cooled lava.

'Because the entire Baltic region is greatly influenced by the melting of the glacier, the rock form could very well be formed at that time or later. And this stone has been brought here by glaciers', he added.

Based on a sonar wave scanner, the object is estimated to have a diameter of up to 60m and emerges from the seabed 3 or 4m. But even sonar scanning technology is controversial.

'Images on sonar wave scanners have a lot of fake objects, making it difficult to assess its accuracy. I do not support any explanation of the image from the sonar scanner until the image processing process is complete. I want to say that these data lack detail and data , 'said Dan Fornari, expert of sonar scanning technology at Dan Fornari Institute of Oceanography, Massachusett.