Researchers find long-lost planes on icebergs: After observing movement, they turned pale!
The first drone images revealed the fuselage partially covered in ice, but surprisingly well preserved. No signs of a violent impact were detected, suggesting the plane may have made a forced landing on the ice before being swallowed by the polar tide.


As scientists analyzed the find and began organizing an expedition to examine the plane more closely, surveillance cameras captured something disturbing. Through the frost-covered windows, shadows were seen moving inside the cockpit. At first, it was thought they might be optical effects due to the refraction of light in the ice, but upon closer analysis, some visual analysis experts suggested that the figures appeared to respond to certain patterns.

This discovery left investigators stunned. While there were no records of survivors from that lost flight, the images indicated that something—or someone—seemed to be moving inside the plane. Theories about the phenomenon ranged from logical explanations, such as changes in the structure of the ice that generated optical illusions, to the more disturbing: could there have been survivors trapped in some kind of frozen time capsule?
Aviation experts and forensic anthropologists were called in to investigate the plane and try to identify its origin. According to historical records, several aircraft disappeared in the region during the Cold War and subsequent decades. However, the codes on the fuselage seemed to indicate it was a commercial flight from the 1950s.