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#17 | |
Gefallen Engel U-666
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![]() Quote:
![]() “On July 30, 1915, our U-28 torpedoed the British steamer Iberian, ![]() “The wreckage remained beneath the water for approximately twenty-five seconds, at a depth that was clearly impossible to assess, when suddenly there was a violent explosion, which shot pieces of debris — among them a gigantic aquatic animal — out of the water to a height of approximately 80-feet.” ![]() “We were unable to identify the creature, but all of us agreed that it resembled an aquatic crocodile, which was about 60-feet long, with four limbs resembling large webbed feet, a long, pointed tail and a head which also tapered to a point. Unfortunately we were not able to take a photograph, for the animal sank out of sight after ten or fifteen seconds.” Of the six other men on the con only seaman Robert Maas survived the war and he never said a word! "Unfortunately, almost all witnesses to the incident were later killed. But one lives on: our then cook, submariner Robert Maas, who lives in Gross Ottersleben, near Magdeburg, and who saw the animal while it was still flailing in the air. To my delight, I recently met him again by chance...but if seaman Maas did indeed see anything, he never seems to have placed the fact on record." None of the 61 survivors of the Iberian said any thing about a 60' crocodile either. It has been suggested by some — including us in the original version of this article — that this creature is mostly likely a living specimen of the flipper bearing, croc-featured, long presumed to be extinct mosasaur species, but the fact that Commander von Forstner specifically described the creature as having “webbed” feet would seem to suggest that the culprit is more akin to also allegedly extinct family of gargantuan sea crocodiles known as thalattosuchia. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
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