WATER WOMAN
WATER WOMAN
Our goal in this project is environmental pollution, which has been affecting our lives for years and is a global factor. The research we do and the solutions we find are all about reducing pollution underwater. In addition, it is to restore the aquatic ecosystem to its former state. In this solution we have a hero we created and an aquatic creature we use.
The blowfish/pufferfish/balloonfish, whose scientific name is Lagocephalus Sceleratus, is a fish species belonging to the family Tetraodontidae. This fish, which can produce tetrodotoxin, can cause shortness of breath by causing muscle paralysis, and can cause poisoning that can result in death due to circulatory failure. It can be consumed unconsciously by some people in some regions. However, most people do not even know that it is poisonous. The pufferfish can even tear off a human finger with its straight teeth while fishing. This fish, which can grind metal and plastic with its teeth, is usually 50-100 meters off the shore and cannot get very close to the shore.
This hero we created is called for WaterWoman. She sends electromagnetic signals to the pufferfish and mentally hijacks their brains. With the help of low-hertz sounds, it can record the radiation frequencies emitted by the brain in situations such as pain, fear, anxiety, jealousy. Then, the electromagnetic wave at a frequency suitable for the desired psychology can be sent from the outside to the brain of the living thing and the mind can be controlled. Our hero uses exactly this method, since remote mind control has an unlimited scope. In this way, she takes the pufferfish under mental control in the oceans and seas and minimizes the pollution under water.
Thanks to the grinding and sharp teeth of the pufferfish, they destroy metals, plastics and other wastes in the sea by grinding them. By eliminating the wastes, the damage to the underwater creatures is minimized. It allows fish and other underwater creatures to live in cleaner water. It will also contribute positively to the future of the aquatic ecosystem.