15 Unbelievable Things Found Frozen In Ice

15 Unbelievable Things Found Frozen In Ice

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15 Unbelievable Things Found Frozen In Ice
I’m going to keep this intro short, because this list is going to be cool in every sense of the word. Make
sure you stay tuned for number one if you want to learn more about a real mummy’s curse. Here are 15
unbelievable things found frozen in ice.
Frozen Treasure
In 2013, an anonymous mountain climber walked up to some French law enforcement officers and
turned over a small box containing 100 precious jewels including rubies, emeralds, and sapphires worth
somewhere in the neighborhood of $300,000.
He'd found it in the ice on Mont Blanc, and we know now the box came from an Air India flight that
crashed on the mountain in January 1966. In the years since the crash, bits and pieces of the wreckage
and cargo have been found. After the overwhelmingly honest climber turned the jewels over the
authorities, they began to look for the rightful owner. No word if the treasure made it back as of yet.

Fighting Moose
Fighting over the right to mate with is some sort of a priority in the animal kingdom. Something that
takes precedence to, let’s say, your own life. Nothing shows this more than the discovery of two moose
which were stuck permanently in mortal combat, encased in about 8 inches of ice in Unalakleet, Alaska,
along the Bering Sea. They were discovered in 2019 by two hikers who were unsurprisingly amazed by
what they found.
Bill Samuel, a retired biologist and moose expert at the University of Alberta in Canada says he has never
seen anything quite like it, though he is aware that the strength of the powerful animals and irregular
shapes of their antlers can occasionally result in tangling that the animals can't escape. Entangled moose
skulls have been found occasionally, but it's the first time in recent memory that any have been found in
ice.

A Fox
Somewhere in Germany, one poor fox decided to walk casually on one of the frozen lakes.
Unfortunately, the lake wasn’t completely frozen over, so the fox fell into the frigid water. Falling into
frozen water is bad enough, but the temperatures that day was so low, the water around the fox quickly
froze solid.
The foxicle, yes, I went there, was found by a local hunter named Franz Stehl. By the time he came upon
the fox, it was so frozen that it was impossible to know when it fell into the water. He came back the
next day, armed with a chainsaw and cut the animal out of the ice. He then, quite controversially, put
the frozen fox on display in front of a small hotel that he owned, to serve as a warning to everybody the
dangers of walking on frozen lakes.

A WWI Battlefield
Beginning in the 1990s, global warming started melting the glaciers around Northern Italy's town of
Peio. Artifacts from decades before started pouring out of the ice — love letters, diaries, and finally the
bodies of soldiers who died fighting in the White War of World War I.
As the melting continues, more bodies are being found. In 2004, a local mountain guide found three
Hapsburg soldiers on the mountainside. Historians have even uncovered an entire cabin preserved
beneath the ice, complete with ammo boxes, steel helmets, and clothes left behind by the men who
fought in the White War. Things like half-dismantled engines have been recovered, along with touching
personal items like photographs, newspaper clippings, and pieces of trench art. Some of the bodies have
even been identified, hopefully bringing a little closure to families who have waited, and wondered, for
decades.
A Tunic from the Iron Age
With the melting of Norway's glaciers, archaeologists are finding things that Iron Age people dropped
and couldn't be bothered to pick up. Only goes to show that our early ancestors didn’t think much about
littering. The mountains of Oppland County have yielded more than 2,000 artifacts alone, which makes
it the Iron Age equivalent of the Vegas Strip.
The area was once a major thoroughfare for our ancient ancestors. Countless people passed back and
forth over the mountains, moving livestock and manning farms with the changes in the seasons. Most of
the artifacts have been things like arrowheads and horseshoes. But scientists have also found mittens,
and in 2011 researchers from the University of Oslo and the Norwegian University of Science and
Technology found a tunic they dated to between A.D. 230 and A.D. 390 covered in ancient horse poop.

Original Author: Produced by Top 5 Best and published on 12/12/2020 Source

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