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A World War II submarine has been discovered in the pristine snow at the summit of Everest. Mystery, mystery…
In a twist that defies logic and history, a German submarine from World War II was found this morning at the highest point on Earth, standing at 8,848 meters, perched atop Mount Everest. The discovery was made by a team of Nepalese climbers who initially thought it was an altitude hallucination.
The team, led by Nepalese guide Tenzing Sherpa, first thought it was a mirage caused by their difficult ascent and lack of oxygen. “I couldn’t believe it. It was an unreal sight, a life-sized submarine right in front of us, embedded in the snow and ice. We first thought our oxygen equipment was malfunctioning, but very quickly, we realized it was indeed real,” recounts Tenzing, still in shock from the discovery.
The submarine, perfectly preserved by the extreme cold, displays the swastika, the symbol of the German navy from 1935 to 1945. Inside, everything appears intact, as if the crew had left the ship just yesterday. Even the torpedoes are still loaded.
Researchers from around the world are in turmoil and are trying to understand how a submarine could end up at the summit of the highest mountain in the world. “This is one of the greatest historical mysteries of our time,” said Professor Heinz Von Strudel, a German historian and global expert on World War II submarines, “The most plausible theory would be that the submarine was transported by a massive prehistoric wave during the last ice age, but even that assumption seems too crazy to be true.”
During this astonishing episode, the only certainty remains the sailor’s saying: “The sea is unpredictable, even in the mountains!”
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