Sound waves reveal the submarine suspected to be sunk by a sea monster
Engineers using sound wave technology found the location of the German submarine during World War I is believed to be attacked and sunk by sea monsters.
A group of marine engineers put power cables under the Irish Sea to detect the body of a German submarine during World War I, Seeker reported yesterday. According to legend, the ship sank into the sea by being attacked by a giant sea monster with big eyes and white teeth.
German submarine UB-85 was detected by sound waves.(Photo: SP Energy Networks).
The wreck is believed to belong to the UB-85, the U-boa t submarine attached to the mysterious mysterious legend on April 30, 1918. The report said the submarine was caught by British patrol ship HMS Coreopsis after rising from the water off Belfast, Ireland.
Partly flooded by not closing the door while escaping from Coreopsis cannon, UB-85 was forced to rise to the surface again and was abandoned by the crew of 34. The crew on the submarine asked to surrender without resistance to the surprise of the British army.
The reason for the crew's strange action is thought to be attacked by sea monsters . According to legend, the strange monster rose from the sea when the submarine was charging on the water at night. Captain Günther Krech described the monster with big eyes, a horned skull, a small head and white teeth under the moonlight. The sailors immediately pointed their guns at it, Krech recalls.
UB-85 is believed to be sunk by a sea monster.(Artwork: Pliosaur).
Although the creature dove into the sea, the panel at the front deck of the ship was damaged and the ship could not continue to dive underwater. The wreck was found in an underwater survey under the Western Link cooperation project between SP Energy Networks and National Grid.
"The image we obtained from the undersea scan is extremely detailed," said Peter Roper, senior project manager for SP Energy Networks. The sound wave shows the nearly intact 100-year-old submarine on the bottom of the North Channel, off the town of Stranraer in northwest Scotland. The ship was about 56m long with many debris scattered near the tail.
"The end-of-the-war features like the big guns on the deck are the strongest evidence of this being the UB-85 submarine. We are getting closer to the secret discovery of UB-85 and reason due to the sinking of the ship, whether it was due to a normal technical incident or something more difficult to explain, " Innes McCartney, an honorary maritime archaeologist and researcher at Bournemouth University, He said.
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