Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Swedish Researcher Peter Lindberg Looking For Champagne


Swedish Researcher Peter Lindberg Looking For Champagne, A Swedish researcher Peter Lindberg and his team were looking for champagne. During research they saw the round object which appears to have 300m drag marks behind it.

The huge object featuring a 18-meter-diameter was seen on the 100-meter-deep ocean floor in the Gulf of Bothnia, somewhere between Sweden and Finland.


They got more than they bargained for in their research and they suggest that the round object crashed along the ocean floor but the chances of the object being a UFO are slim.


They were using sonar to search for the wreck of a ship that sank with cases of an extremely rare brand of champagne onboard.

There were observed several marks and signs that distroyed the surroundings so the alleged UFO found on the bed of Gulf of Bothnia, most likely displaced across the sea.

Peter Lindberg and his team were using sonar to search for the wreck of a ship that sank with cases of an extremely rare brand of champagne onboard. But they got more than they bargained for when they saw the round object which appears to have 300m ‘drag marks’ behind it, suggesting that it crashed along the ocean floor.

Lindberg himself has not suggested that the round object is necessarily a UFO. And even if it turns out to be artificial, it doesn’t have to have extraterrestrial origins. Another possibility is that it’s a ‘new Stonehenge’, some kind of man-made structure that was once on land but has since ended up submerged – although 300m is a long way down for such a structure to go.

While there is no obvious explanation, the chances of the object being a UFO are slim. As is often the case with such mysteries, a lot of assumptions are being made about the object. For one thing, claims that it is ‘perfectly round’ can’t be verified because the resolution of the sonar image is not quite good enough to enable such a judgement. Also, the ‘drag marks’ aren’t necessarily any such thing.

Sadly, we’re unlikely to get a definitive answer to the mystery any time soon. Lindberg says that although he’s intrigued, he has to get on with his day job. Examining the object would be hugely expensive and might well turn out to be a dead end. So it seems likely that the legend of the crashed Swedish UFO will live on for some time, probably being distorted to fit any number of outlandish theories.

The huge object featuring a 18-meter-diameter was seen on the 100-meter-deep ocean floor in the Gulf of Bothnia, somewhere between Sweden and Finland. They got more than they bargained for in their research and they suggest that the round object crashed along the ocean floor but the chances of the object being a UFO are slim.

They were using sonar to search for the wreck of a ship that sank with cases of an extremely rare brand of champagne onboard. There were observed several marks and signs that distroyed the surroundings so the alleged UFO found on the bed of Gulf of Bothnia, most likely displaced across the sea.