
This undated handout photo released by the Kiel-based GEOMAR oceanographic research centre on March 23, 2026 shows an image of munitions on the seabed, captured using an SAS (Synthetic aperture sonar) system, during the AL648 ALKOR expedition in the Baltic Sea. Just a few kilometres from the beaches of northern Germany's Kiel Bay, huge quantities of World War II munitions are slowly disintegrating underwater near where summer crowds dive in from the beaches. This site, one of the most polluted in the Baltic Sea, is the starting point for the expedition of the scientific research vessel Alkor, belonging to the Kiel-based GEOMAR oceanographic research centre. The ship's crew of 11 sailors and a dozen scientists from Germany, Poland and Lithuania are spending three weeks aboard studying how these toxic weapons dumping grounds are contaminating the waters of the Baltic, one of the regions of the globe most affected by munitions and shipwrecks. (Photo by Handout / GEOMAR / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / GEOMAR" - HANDOUT - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

