According to the British publication METRO, four pictures were recently discovered, taken in 1930 during a spiritualistic seance, in which a ghost was captured.
One of the photographs clearly shows the figure of a dark-haired woman draped in a shawl. The rest of the photos also show her face, but surrounded by fog, which parapsychologists call ectoplasm.
The photographs were found in the records of Lieutenant Colonel Gordon Tucker, which were kept all this time in the State Archives of Northern Ireland.
![Image Image](https://i.greatplainsparanormal.com/images/018/image-51228-1-j.webp)
![Image Image](https://i.greatplainsparanormal.com/images/018/image-51228-2-j.webp)
“These manifestations look like faces surrounded by a white mist known as ectoplasm,” says archivist Alan Robertson.
Ouija sessions were quite popular in the 30s, as many tried to establish contact with their friends and relatives who died during the First World War.
At the same time, Mr. Robertson offers a rational explanation: in his opinion, these pictures were taken by double exposure of the frame (overlaying one image on another), or a mannequin was used as a ghost.
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