During construction work at the Cuxhaven airfield in Nordholz (Germany), a unique discovery was made: a German StuG III G assault gun was discovered. According to unofficial data, at least four more armored vehicles and a Junkers W-34 aircraft are in the ground, reports Zwiadowcahistorii.

For several days, the attention of military enthusiasts and the search community has been focused on Lower Saxony, where work is underway to build a new runway near the port of Cuxhaven.

The local military airfield has a rich history from World War II. Unofficial information suggests that the site was allegedly surveyed using ground penetrating radar, which revealed significant anomalies.

According to the archives of the Thorsten Perl magazine, after the surrender of the German Wehrmacht, tanks remained at the Nordholz airbase: the archival photo shows Marder III and Hetzer self-propelled guns, as well as StuG III G assault guns. The lens captured the remains of a Junkers W-34 aircraft.

After the Americans left, all this equipment was allegedly placed in several large pits near the air base and covered with sand. Now, decades later, builders have opened one of these burials, and if the ground penetrating radar data is confirmed, humanity will be in for a real sensation – an almost completely preserved open-air tank museum that has lain in the ground since 1945, the report notes.

Zwiadowcahistorii Zwiadowcahistorii

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