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  1. PhoneFresh7595 on

    I am surprised that with under water radar we haven’t seen anything really big, or have we?

  2. yeahbitch_science_ on

    It didn’t disturb the squid, didn’t move/repel the water, acceleration high speed one of the observables being satisfied. It seems to be a USO.

  3. TheLostRanger0117 on

    Looks like some sort of barracuda. You can see the eye and the fins, both on the side and at the tail.

  4. joncmellentape on

    Asked an older friend (in his 70s when he passed) if he ever saw anything he couldn’t explain while he was a diver for the Navy. He explained that these little strips of light would float up to them super fast, check them out, then swim away just as fast. They had no idea what they were. So…….this checks out.

  5. Hate to burst everyone’s bubble, but there’s some very clear masking errors as the object passes. Look at the sides of the squid.

  6. There are many fish that can swim over 40mph, and this looks like a strawberry squid (size reference). There is nothing that says otherwise a USO.

  7. Isn’t this just a fish swimming past? Fish are very, very fast. As an example, a black marlin can swim 80mph, which is way faster then whatever’s in this video.

  8. Remote-Albatross-240 on

    UAP. Maybe the CIA or military knows more about what they are, but I’m sure it’s classified

  9. I’d assume it’s just another sea creature or an unknown creature even, rather than an alien or some ufo since we haven’t explored everything down there yet.

  10. That’s literally just a fish. A large percentage of deep water fish use silvering as camouflage. Elongated fish like that are also built for speed. There’s a lot of weird shit in the ocean, but this was about as standard as things get.

  11. Dear-Revenue1607 on

    It’s obviously a plane guys. Somone get the location so we can track the flights in the area

  12. Helltothenotothenono on

    That looks like quality cgi to me. I’m going to be skeptical on this oft reposted post

  13. Sea_Quiet_9612 on

    A simple reflection of the sun on the camera, or marsh gas, that’s the only plausible explanation I can think of 😊