Submerged UFO Spotted on Google Earth?

By Tim Binnall

A Google Earth image of the ocean floor shows a sizeable circular anomaly that some suspect could be a submerged flying saucer that measures a staggering five miles in diameter. The very weird find, which can be seen in detail here, was made by indefatigable UFO researcher Scott Waring as he was studying photos from the popular satellite mapping service. While 'exploring' the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, the anomaly hunter was surprised to see what appears to be a perfectly round object submerged in the waters off the coast of Peru remarkably close to where the famed Nazca Lines are located.

Waring theorizes that the oddity being located near the iconic geoglyphs is no coincidence. Noting that the Nazca Lines are said by some to be "drawings to welcome the gods," he posited that those deities were, in fact, misidentified extraterrestrial visitors, possibly traveling in the very vehicle seen on the ocean floor. As for the object itself, the researcher indicated that a measuring feature on Google Earth shows that the the anomaly is a whopping five miles in diameter and he also observed that it appears to boast "a dome structure at its center that is higher than the rest of the disk," which he suggests serves as confirmation that the oddity is some kind of craft.

Taking the fantastic hypothesis a step further, the anomaly hunter muses that the circular object "is also the right size and shape to be the lost city of Atlantis," which he posited was actually an "alien ship that was floating on the ocean" before ultimately sinking beneath the surface of the water long ago. While Waring declared that the discovery constitutes absolute "proof of ancient aliens," skeptical observers will undoubtedly disagree with that assessment and, instead, say that the strange shape is merely a natural feature of the ocean floor and not something extraterrestrial. With that in mind, what's your take on the puzzling find? Share your best guess on what it could be at the C2C Facebook page.