Posted on 06/27/2012 6:17:57 AM PDT by rawhide
What a bunch of crap. No close up pictures? No one has gotten samples of it yet? This story has been around for months. You would think that someone has figured it out by now.
You might be right?
Soot? Like cold dead algae? Bet the Baltic is full of that.
laff
Probably an old space re-entry vehicle. The ‘rocks’ around the hole are the insulating panels and the soot is from the burn on reentry.
A bubble of highly magnetized iron based rock from magma that surfaced and hardened millions of years ago, and was subsequently covered by the Baltic?
That’s really interesting. Maybe they could overcome the instability with today’s computer’s like they do with today’s most sophisticated fighters.
I don’t understand why people are so enamored with snopes. They’ve been busted several times for false information in the past.
i dunno....just doesn’t sound quite right...especially when you consider that photo montage they put up last week includinf footage of the loch ness monster. they included several of the same pic of the ‘object’ that were tinted different colors etc..
we’re gettign played here, is my thought
This story has to be a hoax. There are a couple of close up photos but nothing to match what the wild scene they describe. Its probably viral marketing for a movie or game thats coming out soon.
snopes.com is a selective truth or lie site.
Modern cameras (I.e. digital). All require electronics. Given this discovery of the interference, I’m sure somebody can scrounge up an old manual film camera. Lighting would be the issue then. Would have to go with chemical based lights.
Have you no decency Sir, damn you.
I was going to put forth this one...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphere_(film)
or as I like to call it “Spew”.
‘Then if it is a meteorite or an asteroid, or a volcano, or a base from, say, a U-boat from the Cold War which has manufactured and placed there - or if it is a UFO... ‘Well honestly it has to be something.’
It has to be something. OK thanks for that brilliant observation.
So get an old entirely-mechanical film camera in a waterproof case and start snapping pictures. Use a non-electrical chemical flare for illumination.
Likely to be large magnetized rocks.
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