>>1835202Oh yea... the ghost story.
So these mineshafts are everywhere right, and during the historical mining operations a lot of rivers were diverted and dams built- most of that has been changed now.
One result however was that a lot of mine shafts ended up underwater; typically in small dams.
Now these are not just unmarked, they are seriously spooky.
If you swim over one you will feel the water suddenly get freezing, the water is always kids murky so you won't be able to see the bottom- but there isn't going to be one.
What's even worse is that these holes suck people in.
You see the shafts often penetrated aquifers, so large volumes of water from reservoirs and dams would be sucked into them- and the water gets sucked in much faster because it's draining out the whole surface area of the mine but only going in through the shaft- not to mention the temperature difference.
People swimming won't notice the pull of the mineshaft immediately, they will just suddenly get tired
>>1835204There's a public appeal for information, to know someone was in the area simply isn't enough