Woman records ‘alien’ sounds from Siberian lake

Amazing sounds of ‘aliens’ can be heard in a freezing Siberian lake, a Russian woman has claimed.

A photographer in the Altai Mountains recorded the extraordinary haunting noises while walking on the frozen water.

‘The mournful howling sounds made me really feel aliens must be close by,’ posted Svetlana Kuzina.

Svetlana Kuzina recorded the extraordinary haunting noises comingf from Lake Ak-Kem

She heard the sounds as she walked on the lake's frozen surface

She heard the sounds as she walked on the lake's frozen surface

 She heard the sounds as she walked on the lake’s frozen surface

The frozen ice made sounds that changed between very quiet and very loud

The frozen ice made sounds that changed between very quiet and very loud

Svetlana described the sound as 'soft, low, thick, long, taut, howling' which made her feel she was in contact with aliens

Svetlana described the sound as ‘soft, low, thick, long, taut, howling’ which made her feel she was in contact with aliens

In day time the acoustics are louder and sharper, she explained on her Russian Facebook account

In day time the acoustics are louder and sharper, she explained on her Russian Facebook account

In day time the acoustics are louder and sharper, she explained on her Russian Facebook account

Lake Ak-Kem in Siberia. Svetlana often photographs shooting stars around the lake at night

Lake Ak-Kem in Siberia. Svetlana often photographs shooting stars around the lake at night

She said the sounds coming from the lake are somewhat reminiscent of whales 'singing'

She said the sounds coming from the lake are somewhat reminiscent of whales 'singing'

She said the sounds coming from the lake are somewhat reminiscent of whales ‘singing’

‘Finally – I thought, ‘I am on the verge of contact with extraterrestrial minds!”

She was frightened the first time she heard the ‘alien-like’ sounds in the middle of the night while photographing shooting stars at Lake Ak-Kem.

The noise was ‘soft, low, thick, long, taut, howling, changing between quiet and very loud – somewhat reminiscent of whales ‘singing’.’

In day time the acoustics are louder and sharper, she explained on her Russian Facebook account which chronicles her life in the wilds of Siberia.

‘Then I realised the sounds were coming from the lake, and stood there long after the shoot was done, feeling amazed and a bit scared by the lake’s song,’ she said.

‘Later I heard this song many times at different times of day. ‘ 

The frozen acoustics are from the ice expanding and contracting, say experts.

This natural shifting produces a range of high and low sound frequencies.

 



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