Difference between revisions of "A Fisherman Working For £500-a-month Has Stumbled Across What Is Possibly The World s Biggest Blob Of Ambergris - Worth £2"
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− | A fisherman working for £500-a-month has stumbled across what is possibly the world's biggest blob of | + | 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, 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, where they started examining the unusual discovery. <br>To their astonishment, [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-thai-lan-bangkok-pattaya-5-ngay.html tour thái lan] the large rocks [http://search.ft.com/search?queryText=appeared 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 [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-thai-lan-bangkok-pattaya-5-ngay.html tour đi thái lan] longer.<br>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.<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 |
Latest revision as of 08:12, 3 January 2021
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, 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, where they started examining the unusual discovery.
To their astonishment, tour thái lan 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 tour đi thái lan 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