Have they actually dug any of them up yet or parts of them?
[video=youtube;oOtfjcIfuYo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOtfjcIfuYo[/video]From the story...
"In a preliminary exploration, a borehole was dug which penetrated a crate and a shape that could be an aeroplane was identified. Experts determined that there was certainly something metallic at the site and that what is under the surface is not a natural feature."
Woo hoo!
Surveys at one of three sites identified in the country have shown large areas of electrically conductive material, suggesting the metal parts of the aircraft, around 30 feet deep.
The location and depth is consistent with eight eye witness reports given to Mr Cundall.
''We put a camera down a borehole and went into a box and through two inches of Canadian pine,'' Mr Cundall disclosed.
''Yes, we did see what we thought was an aeroplane.''
Hundreds of Spitfires and other aircraft that crashed during the Battle of Britain are still waiting to be unearthed across Britain, historians have disclosed.
And a pensioner claimed a whole squadron of the planes could be found immaculately preserved under houses in Birmingham. Matt Queenan, 83, said he helped bury the planes in 1950 under instructions from the War Office, greasing them up and encasing them in boxes.