Topic: anyone guess wth this is?
tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 07:56 PM
Cool video...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YegdEOSQotE




Okay.... so.... back to originally video....

maybe if you mix together a frozen peat bog.... plus a geothermal (laced with or without methane) kicking up sediment/organic boggy material... maybe you have what you see in the original video. *shrugs*

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:11 PM
If you look close at about 1:25, you can see a frog move....

This is after the camera moves... see the dog and goes back...

The water doesn't appear to even been about a foot thick.... has to be some sort of geothermal... but not too hot mixing with the frozen water not to fry the frog!

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:18 PM
Edited by mightymoe on Mon 03/10/14 08:20 PM

If you look close at about 1:25, you can see a frog move....

This is after the camera moves... see the dog and goes back...

The water doesn't appear to even been about a foot thick.... has to be some sort of geothermal... but not too hot mixing with the frozen water not to fry the frog!


i never saw the frog... it has to be thermal then... frogs don't live in the snow...

unless it's an alien frog...scared

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:22 PM


If you look close at about 1:25, you can see a frog move....

This is after the camera moves... see the dog and goes back...

The water doesn't appear to even been about a foot thick.... has to be some sort of geothermal... but not too hot mixing with the frozen water not to fry the frog!


i never saw the frog... it has to be thermal then... frogs don't live in the snow...

unless it's an alien frog...scared


:banana: Mystery Solved :banana:

bigsmile I accept all forms of major credit cards for payment of my services! bigsmile

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:22 PM
grumble Looks like a common frog to me!

Now pay up! laugh

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:25 PM

grumble Looks like a common frog to me!

Now pay up! laugh


still raises more questions... but it's seems more likely now...

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:29 PM


grumble Looks like a common frog to me!

Now pay up! laugh


still raises more questions... but it's seems more likely now...


Lithuanian geothermal peat bog with a frog! What more is there to know?whoa


tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:38 PM
http://www.mongabay.com/reference/country_studies/lithuania/GEOGRAPHY.html

Lithuania does have iron ore... so that might explain the reddish hue!

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:53 PM
Edited by tanyaann on Mon 03/10/14 08:55 PM
Oh plus you can't forget to toss in a little radioactive fallout from Chernobyl ..... surprised the frog didn't have an extra leg or eye!


spock Come on Moe! Just admit that Tanya is probably right! tongue2

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:54 PM



grumble Looks like a common frog to me!

Now pay up! laugh


still raises more questions... but it's seems more likely now...


Lithuanian geothermal peat bog with a frog! What more is there to know?whoa


ice at the edges was 20 centimeters thick or even more. frogs are cold blooded... why was the frog not hibernating? they don't hibernate under water, they breath air...what is the frog eating? how would it breath when the ice froze over?

i'm sure all that can be explained, but i don't know..

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 08:58 PM

Oh plus you can't forget to toss in a little radioactive fallout from Chernobyl ..... surprised the frog didn't have an extra leg or eye!


spock Come on Moe! Just admit that Tanya is probably right! tongue2

most of the evidence says your right, but the frog threw a monkey wrench in it for me...

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 09:01 PM




grumble Looks like a common frog to me!

Now pay up! laugh


still raises more questions... but it's seems more likely now...


Lithuanian geothermal peat bog with a frog! What more is there to know?whoa


ice at the edges was 20 centimeters thick or even more. frogs are cold blooded... why was the frog not hibernating? they don't hibernate under water, they breath air...what is the frog eating? how would it breath when the ice froze over?

i'm sure all that can be explained, but i don't know..


Because at closer look, the 'red stuff' is coming directly out of the ground.

The 'thermal' probably recently opened up... and frog came out of hibernation from being buried in the mud. Frogs can breathe through their skin.


Frog questions answered here...
http://www.learner.org/jnorth/search/FrogNotes3.html

spock Did you not take biology in high school? I am starting to think that you are purposely trying to be a pain in the @S$!

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 09:02 PM
I need to get off of here and get some sleep.... asleep


Now say it! Say 'Tanya is RIGHT!' :laughing:

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 09:04 PM
As for what the froggie would eat.....


well, if he unthawed some water fauna might have unthawed too! Or else froggie is screwed if there is still several months of winter!

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 09:06 PM





grumble Looks like a common frog to me!

Now pay up! laugh


still raises more questions... but it's seems more likely now...


Lithuanian geothermal peat bog with a frog! What more is there to know?whoa


ice at the edges was 20 centimeters thick or even more. frogs are cold blooded... why was the frog not hibernating? they don't hibernate under water, they breath air...what is the frog eating? how would it breath when the ice froze over?

i'm sure all that can be explained, but i don't know..


Because at closer look, the 'red stuff' is coming directly out of the ground.

The 'thermal' probably recently opened up... and frog came out of hibernation from being buried in the mud. Frogs can breathe through their skin.


Frog questions answered here...
http://www.learner.org/jnorth/search/FrogNotes3.html

spock Did you not take biology in high school? I am starting to think that you are purposely trying to be a pain in the @S$!


ok... i didn't know they can live underwater that long, and i didn't know they eat fish too...

that sums it up pretty neatly now...

tanyaann's photo
Mon 03/10/14 09:07 PM
Edited by tanyaann on Mon 03/10/14 09:09 PM
Soooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo........ bigsmile

mightymoe's photo
Mon 03/10/14 09:14 PM

Soooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo........ bigsmile


:wink: :angel: laugh laugh

grayskyagain's photo
Mon 03/10/14 11:08 PM
I find this interesting. You didn't say if you ever saw this pond before this or after. I'm wondering if you stumbled on a meteor impact that just happened and you didn't know it. I'm wondering if it is frozen over now. If so, there could be a very valuable rock down in there.

grayskyagain's photo
Mon 03/10/14 11:12 PM
I find this interesting. You didn't say if you ever saw this pond before this or after. I'm wondering if you stumbled on a meteor impact that just happened and you didn't know it. I'm wondering if it is frozen over now. If so, there could be a very valuable rock down in there.

SparklingCrystal 💖💎's photo
Tue 03/11/14 02:03 AM
Edited by SparklingCrystal 💖💎 on Tue 03/11/14 02:04 AM
I saw the frog, didn't think of it, but in the feedback on YouTube the OP mentioned it was woken up from hibernation by warmth. And dang, good point! It shouldn't have been active, it's winter!

I found out it was in Lithuania, cos I'm smart with internet, lol. I wanted to know where in Europe, I mean, I am in Europe, wanna know if it's nextdoor or not.
So I Googled the OP's name, found a Russian page with his name, indicating he's Russian.
Then I found an article on his clip which mentioned it was in Lithuania and had that professor's quote.
Here it is :)
http://cryptozoologynews.com/footage-shows-strange-phenomenon-frozen-pond/