Tracing UFO origins under the Baltic Sea

A group of Swedish experts will dive to the bottom of the Baltic Sea to find out the origin of an unidentified object (UFO) down there.

In June 2011, a Swedish group of underwater treasure hunters discovered the body of a wine ship at a depth of about 90 meters below the Baltic Sea. The ship, dated about a century, was sunk by the German navy during World War I. While using the ultrasonic transmitter to search for precious champagne in the wreck, the expedition team found a large circular object showing up on the device's screen. Strange objects with a diameter of more than 18m.

Picture 1 of Tracing UFO origins under the Baltic Sea
The Baltic sea-shaped strange object appears
screen of ultrasonic detector.

Peter Lindberg, the chief of the expedition, had been searching for wrecks in the sea for almost 20 years, claiming he had never seen such strange objects in his career. Traces around the object showed that it had moved from one place on the seabed to the location where they saw it.

Lindberg's discovery quickly became a hot topic for newspapers and the online community. It is called "unusual object in the Baltic Sea ". Many newspapers identified strange objects as flying aliens of aliens, but many considered it to be an artificial object.

Recently Lindberg and 12 colleagues, including an ultrasound expert, decided to return to the location of the strange object to study it, Fox News reported.

"We will look at the field around the object in several new ways, while using ultrasound to create a three-dimensional image of the environment. Divers will descend further and a robot carrying the camera will be conditioned. "" Lindberg said.

A group of cameramen of Sweedish TV also dive with Lindberg's team to report on the evolution of the exploration process.

Analysts say that Lindberg's new expedition, at a high cost, is a risky gamble but can also bring huge benefits. If the strange object is an extraterrestrial product, its value will reach billions of dollars.