A Fisherman Working For £500-a-month Has Stumbled Across What Is Possibly The World s Biggest Blob Of Ambergris - Worth £2: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
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| − | A fisherman working for | + | A fisherman working for £500-a-month has stumbled across what is possibly the world's biggest blob of Ambergris - worth £2.4 million.<br>Ambergris - or whale vomit - is considered a sea treasure and floating gold because of an odourless [/news/alcohol/index.html alcohol] that is extracted to make a perfume's scent last longer.<br>Naris Suwannasang, 60, [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-thai-lan-bangkok-pattaya-5-ngay.html tour thái lan] saw several pale rock-like pale lumps washed up on a beach when he was walking by the sea in Nakhon Si Thammarat, southern [/news/thailand/index.html Thailand].<br>He called his cousins to help him take the items home, [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-thai-lan-bangkok-pattaya-5-ngay.html tour đi thái lan] where they started examining the unusual discovery. <br>To their astonishment, the large rocks appeared to resemble ambergris, a rare secretion from whales which is used as an expensive ingredient in perfume production - such as Chanel No5 - to make its scent last for longer.<br>The family tested the surface by burning it with a lighter, [http://browse.deviantart.com/?qh=§ion=&global=1&q=causing causing] it to melt instantly while giving off a musky smell, giving them further confirmation of their find.<br> <br> <br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox news floatRHS" data-version="2" id="mol-2e141bb0-331d-11eb-94b9-ed9a4e283b5f" website fisherman finds 'the world's biggest' blob of whale vomit |
Version vom 30. Dezember 2020, 20:49 Uhr
A fisherman working for £500-a-month has stumbled across what is possibly the world's biggest blob of Ambergris - worth £2.4 million.
Ambergris - or whale vomit - is considered a sea treasure and floating gold because of an odourless [/news/alcohol/index.html alcohol] that is extracted to make a perfume's scent last longer.
Naris Suwannasang, 60, tour thái lan saw several pale rock-like pale lumps washed up on a beach when he was walking by the sea in Nakhon Si Thammarat, southern [/news/thailand/index.html Thailand].
He called his cousins to help him take the items home, tour đi thái lan where they started examining the unusual discovery.
To their astonishment, the large rocks appeared to resemble ambergris, a rare secretion from whales which is used as an expensive ingredient in perfume production - such as Chanel No5 - to make its scent last for longer.
The family tested the surface by burning it with a lighter, causing it to melt instantly while giving off a musky smell, giving them further confirmation of their find.
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox news floatRHS" data-version="2" id="mol-2e141bb0-331d-11eb-94b9-ed9a4e283b5f" website fisherman finds 'the world's biggest' blob of whale vomit