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Topic: anyone guess wth this is?
mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 09:13 AM
whoever shot the video own words...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMeoG9ScQ1o#t=98

So I was walking with my dog in the evening just before sunset, we were traveling into vast fields of nature to escape common modern view. By accident I found a pond. It caught my interest since I saw a waterhole in the middle of it. Usually people drills waterholes in their ponds where fish lives, at winter time, so fish can breathe. I thought I will see some fishes and stuff... But as soon as I came closer, I noticed that it was evaporating.

You can't see this in the video since I was filming with my phone which has shitty camera. When I stepped on that frozen pond, farther away from that waterhole (where I was standing) ice was 20 centimeters thick or even more. And that waterhole looked like it was melted with fire or something... You can see around that waterhole that there is snow or maybe ice particles blasted away from the center of this waterhole.


What was underwater there is still unknown to me. It is not volcanic activity. In the middle of Europe there are no volcanos or underground volcanic currents. Plus water would be boiling. There are no pipes in the middle of nowhere, so not a damaged pipe... Natural Gas or oil? Impossible, it is not hot and why only the part of this whole pond is melted just above this thing/activity-reason? I don't know anymore.

smokeybette's photo
Mon 03/10/14 10:33 AM
ufo? some type of geothermal activity as heat is the only thing that will melt ice and the undulating movement might be the rising of a low heat source,,,

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 11:11 AM

ufo? some type of geothermal activity as heat is the only thing that will melt ice and the undulating movement might be the rising of a low heat source,,,


i thought so too, but they keep saying there is no geothermic activity there... wherever there is... and, a vent would melt all the ice on a small pond, wouldn't it?

no photo
Mon 03/10/14 12:40 PM
It looks like a fish full of wind if you ask me:wink:

Seriously though, it is strange but I think it's maybe vegetation that is dead and giving off gas or something similar to that.

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 12:45 PM

It looks like a fish full of wind if you ask me:wink:

Seriously though, it is strange but I think it's maybe vegetation that is dead and giving off gas or something similar to that.


good point, never really thought of that... definitely a possibility
flowerforyou :thumbsup:

no1phD's photo
Mon 03/10/14 12:45 PM
.. sorry moe.. that was me.. we were experimenting with particle beams.. and lasers.. one got away from us.. glad you found where it went though..we we're kind of freaking out here

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 12:47 PM

.. sorry moe.. that was me.. we were experimenting with particle beams.. and lasers.. one got away from us.. glad you found where it went though..we we're kind of freaking out here


glad i could help, but only one problem... nobody knows exactly where's it's at, cept in Europe somewhere... but they do have dogs and snow there...

SparklingCrystal πŸ’–πŸ’Ž's photo
Mon 03/10/14 03:59 PM
It's in Lithuania.
β€œThe phenomenon could also be a hot-cold current effect creating an illusion to deceive the human eye,” says Stephen Mildrew, professor at a Spanish university. β€œIt is as simple as that, we look at it and it could just be a bit of mud mixed with the ice coming up and down, being pushed by hot water currents when they come in contact with the cold ones,” Mildrew said.
Whether the incident is part of a natural phenomenon or a shy creature hiding from the curious human remains unknown.

no photo
Mon 03/10/14 04:02 PM


.. sorry moe.. that was me.. we were experimenting with particle beams.. and lasers.. one got away from us.. glad you found where it went though..we we're kind of freaking out here


nobody knows exactly where's it's at, cept in Europe somewhere... but they do have dogs and snow there...

Well that narrows it down a little:wink:

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 05:28 PM



.. sorry moe.. that was me.. we were experimenting with particle beams.. and lasers.. one got away from us.. glad you found where it went though..we we're kind of freaking out here


nobody knows exactly where's it's at, cept in Europe somewhere... but they do have dogs and snow there...

Well that narrows it down a little:wink:


glad i could help! :wink:

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 05:28 PM

It's in Lithuania.
β€œThe phenomenon could also be a hot-cold current effect creating an illusion to deceive the human eye,” says Stephen Mildrew, professor at a Spanish university. β€œIt is as simple as that, we look at it and it could just be a bit of mud mixed with the ice coming up and down, being pushed by hot water currents when they come in contact with the cold ones,” Mildrew said.
Whether the incident is part of a natural phenomenon or a shy creature hiding from the curious human remains unknown.
he should have poked it with a stick...

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 06:37 PM
There are geothermal aquifers in Lithuania....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaip%C4%97da_Geothermal_Demonstration_Plant

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 06:56 PM

There are geothermal aquifers in Lithuania....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaip%C4%97da_Geothermal_Demonstration_Plant


the link is not working...sad2

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:11 PM


There are geothermal aquifers in Lithuania....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaip%C4%97da_Geothermal_Demonstration_Plant


the link is not working...sad2


Google search - geothermals in lithuania

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:17 PM



There are geothermal aquifers in Lithuania....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaip%C4%97da_Geothermal_Demonstration_Plant


the link is not working...sad2


Google search - geothermals in lithuania
already did, i'm not sure how crystal found out it was in Lithuania... but either way, the water is very still, no ripples on the surface... can't be a steady flow, because the stuff in the center isn't moving like that, it's moving more it's either alive, or the water is being sucked down and pushed out, very slowly...and there is no steam...

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:17 PM
Edited by tanyaann on Mon 03/10/14 07:18 PM
IDK

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:21 PM




There are geothermal aquifers in Lithuania....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaip%C4%97da_Geothermal_Demonstration_Plant


the link is not working...sad2


Google search - geothermals in lithuania
already did, i'm not sure how crystal found out it was in Lithuania... but either way, the water is very still, no ripples on the surface... can't be a steady flow, because the stuff in the center isn't moving like that, it's moving more it's either alive, or the water is being sucked down and pushed out, very slowly...and there is no steam...


If it's an aquifer... there wouldn't necessarily be steam... only a hot water current..... like a hot natural spring. If it was mainly water it would drag up a bunch of mud.

Or maybe it's a mermaid trapped in the ice! :tongue:

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:29 PM
I think there may be another layer of ice..... Also, did the author post that we couldn't see all the detail. :wink:

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:37 PM

I think there may be another layer of ice..... Also, did the author post that we couldn't see all the detail. :wink:


i agree, he could have done more, like throw something in there, or poke it with a stick...

my first thought was geothermal, but i'm still not sure...

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:48 PM
Maybe another sign of global warming or the end of the world scared

Did a google search on soil in Lithuania.... and it came up that there is a lot of peat bogs.

Here is what I found after going a search if peat bogs bubble...



Peatlands are also expected to be impacted by global climate change. Peat is made up of dead organic material, and so is very rich in carbon. It consists of 90% water and 10% plant matter, and is mostly found at the high latitudes of the northern hemisphere, both at the surface and below. Some of this peat is found underneath the permafrost layer, which means the carbon it harbors could be in jeopardy should the permafrost melt. In a study of the world's peatlands, one recent study found that if the globe warms 1οΏ½C over the next few decades, this could lead to a release of 38-100 million tons of carbon per year from peat alone.

http://www.wunderground.com/resources/climate/melting_permafrost.asp

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