Dubai Telegraph - Sea life thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs, sub discovers

EUR -
AED 4.214693
AFN 72.868714
ALL 93.691117
AMD 422.440321
ANG 2.054428
AOA 1053.374834
ARS 1679.324882
AUD 1.636596
AWG 2.068309
AZN 1.955249
BAM 1.957244
BBD 2.310405
BDT 140.803895
BGN 1.940229
BHD 0.432618
BIF 3425.188041
BMD 1.147467
BND 1.480993
BOB 7.926884
BRL 5.898787
BSD 1.147146
BTN 108.136964
BWP 15.589095
BYN 3.187352
BYR 22490.346937
BZD 2.307012
CAD 1.626443
CDF 2616.224447
CHF 0.926052
CLF 0.026299
CLP 1035.072773
CNY 7.767895
CNH 7.783531
COP 3967.882408
CRC 520.383975
CUC 1.147467
CUP 30.407867
CVE 109.439681
CZK 24.205064
DJF 203.92823
DKK 7.475304
DOP 67.246004
DZD 152.983747
EGP 57.279476
ERN 17.212
ETB 181.730082
FJD 2.565166
FKP 0.867384
GBP 0.867084
GEL 3.035095
GGP 0.867384
GHS 12.970798
GIP 0.867384
GMD 83.765476
GNF 10071.893203
GTQ 8.750457
GYD 239.958103
HKD 8.992295
HNL 30.641765
HRK 7.534156
HTG 149.840563
HUF 351.762841
IDR 20415.727178
ILS 3.392605
IMP 0.867384
INR 108.341628
IQD 1503.181351
IRR 1577766.686004
ISK 144.011444
JEP 0.867384
JMD 181.253742
JOD 0.813599
JPY 185.050849
KES 148.601297
KGS 100.346402
KHR 4604.214411
KMF 487.673741
KPW 1032.720414
KRW 1756.661089
KWD 0.353432
KYD 0.95588
KZT 559.798422
LAK 25278.69137
LBP 102755.641633
LKR 382.842488
LRD 209.011494
LSL 18.593286
LTL 3.388171
LVL 0.694092
LYD 7.315145
MAD 10.608374
MDL 20.257418
MGA 4819.360456
MKD 61.64321
MMK 2409.132921
MNT 4107.441134
MOP 9.261134
MRU 45.990899
MUR 54.585424
MVR 17.740269
MWK 1992.002553
MXN 19.883113
MYR 4.748107
MZN 73.3274
NAD 18.593237
NGN 1562.850013
NIO 42.009187
NOK 11.114345
NPR 173.023669
NZD 1.999266
OMR 0.441206
PAB 1.147151
PEN 3.883071
PGK 5.034797
PHP 69.590456
PKR 319.344224
PLN 4.260005
PYG 7044.259132
QAR 4.177357
RON 5.238764
RSD 117.350314
RUB 83.762898
RWF 1679.89122
SAR 4.294502
SBD 9.250216
SCR 15.701228
SDG 689.05796
SEK 10.990345
SGD 1.482187
SHP 0.8567
SLE 28.400226
SLL 24061.80676
SOS 655.78141
SRD 42.918127
STD 23750.243559
STN 24.555787
SVC 10.037406
SYP 126.831899
SZL 18.593147
THB 37.770057
TJS 10.639397
TMT 4.027608
TND 3.341137
TOP 2.762825
TRY 53.285029
TTD 7.778774
TWD 36.307342
TZS 3018.982585
UAH 51.532424
UGX 4175.080664
USD 1.147467
UYU 45.863842
UZS 13775.337882
VES 683.931914
VND 30201.323029
VUV 136.141535
WST 3.157603
XAF 656.441368
XAG 0.017686
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.101087
XCG 2.067325
XDR 0.807469
XOF 648.319055
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.814279
ZAR 18.872848
ZMK 10328.581197
ZMW 20.562262
ZWL 369.483803
  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.37

    +0.22%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.67

    +0.39%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    22.29

    0%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    60.61

    -0.87%

  • BCC

    3.8500

    74.66

    +5.16%

  • NGG

    -1.2400

    79.44

    -1.56%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    18.4

    -0.16%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • GSK

    -1.4800

    50.67

    -2.92%

  • RIO

    -2.5900

    100.08

    -2.59%

  • RELX

    -0.8300

    31.18

    -2.66%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    14.3

    -1.61%

  • AZN

    -2.9600

    174.93

    -1.69%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    58.91

    -0.98%

  • BP

    -1.0400

    39.1

    -2.66%

Sea life thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs, sub discovers
Sea life thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs, sub discovers / Photo: Andrey VEDENIN - DeepSea Monitoring Group/AFP

Sea life thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs, sub discovers

Marine life is thriving on unexploded Nazi bombs sitting at the bottom of a German bay, a submersible has discovered, even capturing footage of starfishes creeping across a huge chunk of TNT.

Text size:

The discovery, which was revealed in a study published Thursday, was "one of those rare but remarkable eureka moments," marine biologist Andrey Vedenin told AFP.

The waters off Germany's coast are estimated to be littered with 1.6 million tons of unexploded munitions left behind from both world wars.

In October last year, a team of German scientists went to a previously uncharted dump site in the Baltic Sea's Luebeck Bay and sent an unmanned submersible 20 metres down to the seafloor.

They were surprised when footage from the sub revealed 10 Nazi-era cruise missiles. Then they were stunned when they saw animals covering the surface of the bombs.

There were roughly 40,000 animals per square metre -- mostly marine worms -- living on the munitions, the scientists wrote in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

They also counted three species of fish, a crab, sea anemones, a jellyfish relative called hydroids and plenty of starfishes.

While animals covered the hard casing of the bombs, they mostly avoided the yellow explosive material -- except for one instance.

The researchers were baffled to see that more than 40 starfishes had piled on to an exposed chunk of TNT.

"It looked really weird," said Vedenin, a scientist at Germany's Carl von Ossietzky University and the study's lead author.

Exactly why the starfishes were there was unclear, but Vedenin theorised they could be eating bacterial film collecting on the corroding TNT.

- Life on weapons of death -

The explosive chemicals are highly toxic, but the animals appeared to have found a way to live near it.

Other than the death-wish starfishes, they did not seem to be behaving strangely.

"The crabs were just sitting and picking something with their claws," Vedenin said.

To find out what kind of bombs they were dealing with, he went online and found a manual from the Nazi air force Luftwaffe describing how to handle and store V-1 flying bombs. The cruise missile exactly matched the 10 bombs from the footage.

Vedenin said "there is some irony" in the discovery that these "things that are meant to kill everything are now attracting so much life."

He compared it to how animals such as deer now thrive in radioactive areas abandoned by humans near the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

Hard surfaces on the seafloor are important for marine life that want more than mud and sand.

Animals once flocked to huge boulders that littered the Baltic Sea, however humans removed the stones to build infrastructure such as roads at the start of the 20th century.

So when the Nazi bombs are eventually cleared from the bay, the researchers called for more stones -- or concrete structures -- to be put in place to continue supporting the sea life.

The scientists also plan to return to the spot next month to set up a time-lapse camera to watch what the starfishes do next.

C.Akbar--DT