Something violent.
Something that didn’t just drown an army…
The Coral That Behaved Like a Mold
Then came the detail that made even skeptics shift uncomfortably.
The coral.
It wasn’t random.
It wasn’t messy reef growth.
It followed the curves like a cast.
Like the coral had wrapped itself around solid man-made shapes and preserved them with eerie precision.
One metallurgist in a remote consultation allegedly said something that chilled the room:
“Tight bonding like that can happen under extreme pressure.”
“Sometimes heat—brief, intense—can help material lock together.”
But compression so violent it fuses layers instantly.
A moment.
A crush.
A catastrophic slam.
And suddenly, the story wasn’t just about a biblical debate.
It was about a seafloor that looked like it still carried trauma.
Then the Bones Appeared
The first skull rested near the edge of the corridor.
Spines.
Clusters.
Not scattered like ordinary drowning remains.
Some were grouped tightly, as if pinned where they fell.
Some bones showed compression fractures that looked less like time…
and more like pressure.
A forensic consultant said something that made the crew stare at the feed in silence:
“Drowning doesn’t leave bones like that.”
“Bodies don’t lock upright.”
“They collapse. They drift. They scatter.”
But these didn’t.
These looked pressed down.
Like a battlefield frozen mid-motion.
One diver allegedly asked to be pulled up.
He refused to go back down.
“I saw a shadow move,” he said.
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