"Free servant? That sounds great!" After reading the content on the last card, Liang En jumped out of bed and sat up against the bedside, then studied the card carefully. .

Obviously, this card comes from the ancient Inuit wizard legend, and the thing summoned is equivalent to the Tonbach summoned by the legendary Inuit wizard, but it is obviously more powerful than the legendary Tonbach. Stronger.

However, it is not easy to summon such a mutated version of Tonbach. He needs to first find an item that meets the requirements, and then perform a traditional summoning ceremony and consume a little of the upper limit of legendary power.

After these tasks are completed, he can summon such a free servant at the cost of consuming a little legendary power every day, and order it to complete one of its original skills and some simple tasks.

Such an invisible servant is naturally much clumsier than a human being. It can only do one job at a time. For example, if you ask it to sweep the floor, it will only sweep the floor. If you ask it to wipe the dust on the furniture, it will only wipe the dust.

But the advantage is that after giving the order, the Tonbach can continue to do this kind of work until the skill user calls to stop or until all the tasks within the specified range are completed.

Of course, this skill also has a range. Tonbach cannot exceed 50m beyond the skill user. Once exceeded, it will dissipate and return to the user.

As we all know, labor costs throughout Western Europe are extremely expensive. In addition, Liang En has more and more secrets, so Liang En often feels that it is difficult to find human resources.

For example, moving the slates in the studio is not an easy job, but because of his skills, he is really not suitable to recruit assistants or assistants like other painters.

Liang En had been having a headache with this problem before, but now with the skill of summoning Tonbach, all the problems have been solved. As long as he recruits a Tonbach, these problems will not be a problem.

After arriving in Greenland by ship and returning to the UK, Mr. Scord immediately asked his lawyer to discuss the reward with Liang En and the others, and he, Liang En and the others discussed the production of the documentary with the producers of the Discovery Channel documentary.

Under normal circumstances, the documentary filmmaker always communicates with the subject, but in different situations, the communication between the two parties is completely different.

For example, in many BBC programs, one person is in front of another and the other is another, especially when the interviewee is a foreigner. For example, the famous gutter perspective is created in this way.

Because it is a documentary, Discovery is better than TV stations like the BBC in this regard, but it is not that it has never done things like documentary fraud.

It's just that this time the other party didn't mess up. On the one hand, the expedition went smoothly beyond everyone's expectations. What they captured was more than enough to support a documentary.

On the other hand, the subject of this documentary is a top rich man and a very famous scholar. Once something happens in this regard, the Discovery Channel itself may encounter problems, let alone a small Directed.

Even in order to avoid causing dissatisfaction, the director specially invited Mr. Liang En and Mr. Scold to participate in the post-production of the documentary to avoid causing any trouble to himself.

Because several groups related to this exploration work were filmed by Discovery Channel reporters, Liang En got more news during the process, such as that everything went well on Nelson's side.

Although Liang En is a person of similar age to himself. Nelson was a little frustrated by the clue, but he quickly cheered up and began searching Franklin's winter camp.

After all, what he missed has been missed, and no matter how frustrated he is, what he missed will never come back. However, if he doesn't seize the opportunity quickly, he may miss some new opportunities.

With this mentality, he and his team started the search work. Just when Liang En and the others found two sunken ships, he also successfully found Franklin's winter camp and the three people who failed to survive the winter. Cemetery of the dead.

Through examination of the remains, they were able to determine that all three deceased persons died of tuberculosis. At the same time, the content of metallic lead in their bodies far exceeded the normal value. There was no doubt that there was a problem of lead poisoning.

At the same time, through the analysis of the nails of the deceased, it was determined that the deceased lacked the trace element zinc during his lifetime, which can cause problems with the human immune system and make him more susceptible to various diseases.

On the other hand, the expedition team at the mouth of Barker River also found more than a dozen scattered skeletons and a series of various Victorian items, confirming the final burial place of this expedition team.

According to information obtained by the Discovery Channel, the Canadian expedition found obvious cutting marks on the remains, indicating that these people did indeed engage in cannibalism.

In addition, the test results also proved that these people had consumed excessive amounts of lead during their lives, and almost all of them suffered from severe lead poisoning.

Because of Liang En's previous reminder when handing over the cultural relics, the archaeologists who got those things immediately tested the cans and water pipe parts.

According to the test results, both the solder used for welding on the cans and the water pipe joints contained a large amount of lead, which also led to lead poisoning among the expedition members on the ship.

The amount of lead ingested from the cans was not large. The real source of lead intake was that the water pipe joints seriously polluted the water source on the ship, causing everyone on the ship to continuously ingest large amounts of lead.

"In other words, we have solved the mystery of the disappearance of the Franklin expedition." After summarizing these circumstances, Liang En concluded in the conference room, while the photographer next to him pointed the camera at him.

"This expedition unfortunately encountered a summer when the ice would not melt, causing them to be trapped on the ice. The poor sealing of early cans and the harsh environment caused them to have problems with insufficient food and fuel on the ship."

"At the same time, both the ingestion of large amounts of lead and the prevalence of respiratory infectious diseases in a closed environment led to large-scale deaths of people on board, forcing the survivors to abandon the ship and head south to seek life."

"Unfortunately, their weakened bodies due to lead poisoning and respiratory diseases and severe lack of supplies prevented them from going very far, and they were finally annihilated at the mouth of the Buck River."

"The Franklin expedition did end in tragedy, but it was not meaningless. For example, in order to find the missing expedition, subsequent expeditions mapped thousands of kilometers of coastline."

"For another example, the Royal Navy also stopped its irrational exploration of the Arctic route because of this incident. Given that professional explorers suffered heavy casualties when taking this route, it was impossible for merchant ships at that time to use this route for trade."

Just when Liang En finished saying these things and was about to end the topic, the director waved a small prompter board to him. After taking a look at it, he immediately adjusted his expression and added the content on the prompter board to the end.

"In short, this is a great exploration in human history, so let us observe three minutes of silence for these heroic human pioneers."

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