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Aliens & UFOs
Divers head to rock bottom of Baltic Sea to solve ‘UFO’ mystery
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<blockquote data-quote="Peregrini" data-source="post: 53434" data-attributes="member: 2670"><p>jimmyquick;</p><p>Welcome to Paranormalis.</p><p>You are right. We do know more about space than we do the oceans. The easy reason for this is it is far more difficult to examine the ocean, its depths, and floor, than it is to peer into space. We can use the naked eye, telescopes of various types, visual light, radio, gamma ray, x-ray, etc and collect data to study and interpret.</p><p>With the ocean, we can't look into it very well at all and exploring it is difficult because of the great pressures at the depths it reaches. We have sonar and other ways to "see" underwater. We can "map" the sea floor but a clear view of it and what's between the "layers" still escapes us. We are getting better at it though and I believe there will be some interesting advances soon.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Peregrini, post: 53434, member: 2670"] jimmyquick; Welcome to Paranormalis. You are right. We do know more about space than we do the oceans. The easy reason for this is it is far more difficult to examine the ocean, its depths, and floor, than it is to peer into space. We can use the naked eye, telescopes of various types, visual light, radio, gamma ray, x-ray, etc and collect data to study and interpret. With the ocean, we can't look into it very well at all and exploring it is difficult because of the great pressures at the depths it reaches. We have sonar and other ways to "see" underwater. We can "map" the sea floor but a clear view of it and what's between the "layers" still escapes us. We are getting better at it though and I believe there will be some interesting advances soon. [/QUOTE]
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Divers head to rock bottom of Baltic Sea to solve ‘UFO’ mystery
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