Over the last few months we have gone through 30 of the worlds greatest mysteries but what we haven’t covered are ancient mysteries. This list aims to put that right! Here are ten great unsolved mysteries of science. Do you have a theory that might solve one of these mysteries? If so, tell us in the comments!
10. Rongorongo
While many people know of the Moai of Easter Island, not that many people know of the other mystery associated with Easter Island. ‘Rongorongo’ is the hieroglyphic written language of the region’s earlier inhabitants. Rongorongo is strange in that no other neighbouring oceanic people used a written language. It appeared around the 1700s, though was unfortunately lost after the early European colonizers banned it because of its ties to the native islanders’ pagan roots.
9. Lost City of Helike

In the late 2nd century AD, the Greek writer Pausanias wrote an account of how (4-500 years earlier?) in one night a powerful earthquake destroyed the great city of Helike, with a Tsunami washing away what remained of the once-flourishing metropolis. The city, capital of the Achaean League, was a worship centre devoted to the ancient god Poseidon, god of the sea. There was no trace of the legendary society mentioned outside of the ancient Greek writings until 1861, when an archeologist found some loot thought to have come from Helike – a bronze coin with the unmistakable head of Poseidon. In 2001, a pair of archeologists managed to locate the ruins of Helike beneath the mud and gravel of the coast, and are currently trying to peice together the rise and sudden fall of what has been called the “real” Atlantis.
8. The Bog Bodies
This mystery may even be a problem for those legendary investigators from CSI and the like! The bog bodies are hundreds of ancient corpses found buried around the northern bogs and wetlands of Northern Europe. These bodies are remarkably well preserved, some dating back 2,000 years. Many of these bodies have tell-tale signs of torture and other medieval “fun”, which have made some researchers postulating that these unfortunate victims were the result of ritual sacrifices.
7. Fall of the Minoans
The Minoans are best known for the legend of Theseus and the Minotaur, but it is in fact the demise of this once-great civilisation that is more interesting. While many historians concentrate on the fall of the Roman Empire, the fall of the Minoans, who resided on the island of Crete, is an equal, if not greater mystery. Three and a half thousand years ago the island was shaken by a huge volcanic eruption on the neighbouring Thera Island. Archeologists unearthed tablets which have shown that the Minoans carried on for another 50 years after the eruption, before finally folding. Theories of what finally ended them have ranged from volcanic ash covering the island and devastating harvests to the weakened society eventually getting taken over by invading Greeks.
6. The Carnac Stones
Everyone has heard of Stonehenge, but few know the Carnac Stones. These are 3,000 megalithic stones arranged in perfect lines over a distance of 12 kilometers on the coast of Brittany in the North-West of France. Mythology surrounding the stones says that each stone is a soldier in a Roman legion that Merlin the Wizard turned in to stone. Scientific attempts at an explanation suggests that the stones are most likely an elaborate earthquake detector. The identity of the Neolithic people who built them is unknown.
5. Who Was Robin Hood?
The historical search for the legendary thief Robin Hood has turned up masses of possible names. One candidate includes the Yorkshire fugitive Robert Hod, also known as Hobbehod or Robert Hood of Wakefield. The large number of suspects is complicated further as the name Robin Hood became a common term for an outlaw. As literature began to add new characters to the tale such as Prince John and Richard the Lionheart the trail became more obscure. To this day no one knows who this criminal really was.
4. The Lost Roman Legion
After the Parthians defeated underachieving Roman General Crassus’ army, legend has it that a small band of the POWs wandered through the desert and were eventually rounded up by the Han military 17 years later. First century Chinese historian Ban Gu wrote an account of a confrontation with a strange army of about a hundred men fighting in a “fish-scale formation” unique to Roman forces. An Oxford historian who compared ancient records claims that the lost roman legion founded a small town near the Gobi desert named Liqian, which in Chinese translates to Rome. DNA tests are being conducted to answer that claim and hopefully explain some of the residents’ green eyes, blonde hair, and fondness of bullfighting.
3. The Voynich Manuscript
The Voynich Manuscript is a medieval document written in an unknown script and in an unknown language. For over one hundred years people have tried to break the code to no avail. The overall impression given by the surviving leaves of the manuscript suggests that it was meant to serve as a pharmacopoeia or to address topics in medieval or early modern medicine. However, the puzzling details of illustrations have fueled many theories about the book’s origins, the contents of its text, and the purpose for which it was intended. The document contains illustrations that suggest the book is in six parts: Herbal, Astronomical, Biological, Cosmological, Pharmaceutical, and recipes.
2. The Tarim Mummies
An amazing discovery of 2,000 year old mummies in the Tarim basin of Western China occurred in the early 90s. But more amazing than the discovery itself was the astonishing fact that the mummies were blond haired and long nosed. In 1993, Victor Mayer a college professor collected DNA from the mummies and his tests verified that the bodies were all of European genetic stock. Ancient Chinese texts from as early as the first millennium BC do mention groups of far-east dwelling caucasian people referred to as the Bai, Yeuzhi, and Tocharians. None, though, fully reveal how or why these people ended up there.
1. Disappearance of the Indus Valley Civilization
The ancient Indus Valley people, India’s oldest known civilization had a culture that stretched from Western India to Afghanistan and a populace of over 5 million. le—India’s oldest known civilization—were an impressive and apparently sanitary bronze-age bunch. The scale of their baffling and abrupt collapse rivals that of the great Mayan decline. They were a hygienically advanced culture with a highly sophisticated sewage drainage system, and immaculately constructed baths. There is to date no archaeological evidence of armies, slaves, conflicts, or other aspects of ancient societies. No one knows where this civilization went.
This list was derived from the excellent article of the same name at livescience





























very interesting.
White people have been around a long time, Notice how aliens in pictures look asian and
remember the persian invasion of europe… even against all odds and this deception… what were white bodys doing in asia… I mean whites were there first even against all odds Whites still Rule this Planet of Apes… Dont be brainwashed by these invading primatives. or youll be next
Jesus, Robin.. gtfo.. seriously, gtfo.
Jesus Robin…gtfo…seiou oh nm what oui said
Great list! I hadn't heard of any of these. Easter Island would be such a cool place to visit.
Another interesting fact about #10, Rongorongo: many of the characters match very closely characters used in the alphabet of the civilization of the Indus valley (#1). There is no explanation for this, yet the number of matches seems too high for coincidence. These two places are nearly on the opposite sides of the earth from each other. How is it that the characters match? (The Indus valley civilization had not yet been discovered when the first Rongrongo tablets were found in the 1700s–so there is no question of later "copying.")
Definitely interesting.
#2 and #4: Could this lend credence to the theory that Jesus visited the far east at some point before his rise to religious fame? I believe it has even been suggested by some that the true burial place of Jesus is in Japan.
I highly doubt that because a) Jesus was from Israel, and they were not known to have blonde hair and green eyes like the Northern Europeans, and b) Jesus was a single man, it appears from the list that there were a number of people from the east.
#8 – the chemicals in the peat bogs are responsible for the almost perfect preservation of the cadavers. I read somewhere that a punishment was to set assumed prisoners/possessed/witches loose in the bog and if they made it out the other end they were considered innocent and went free.
Great list Jamie! I've always been a big fan of Robin Hood's legend and I find it fascinating that even though he was definitely around in a time which had record keepers, there is no solid knowledge of who he really was.
I've even heard that he was really apart of royalty.
He was Robin Hood, not Robert hod or what ever or who ever. Robin Hood was an outcast/outlaw so thats why there is no record of him. Robin Hood is the most famous of all. Not even the Aussie ned kelly can match his legacy, such is life
i love this list. You certaintly spend lots of time with these it seems like everytime I log on there is a new list. Appreciate it. These ancient historical ones are the best.
Jesus wasn't Caucasian, He was Jewish, meaning no blond hair. Look at people in the Middle East now, that's probably what Jesus looked like.
He was Palastinian. judism is a religion not a contry. Jesus would have to be Israile but that wasnt a country until after world war two.
Although I agree with you regarding the fact it’s very unlikely a man from Nazareth would be blonde/blue eyed (I’d even go further to question his actual existence) you have to remember humans are transient. Ancient Greece was full of blonde and red haired men. Today racial stereotyping of Greek men would be dark haired/brown eyed. The world today is a very different place. The bible was compiled by a roman pagan when they realised Christianity was about to become “the next big thing”.
uhhhh jamie, the comment text is just a bit small.
text is small, but still a great list!
Fantastic list! Randall's addition makes things even more fascinating. Now I must proceed to Wikipedia…
Bruno: I've always found it fascinating that Jesus came from the middle east but in the popular vision of what he looks like he seems to be of European descent.
That's because of the Rome eventually adopting the religion 300 years after Jesus died. The religion became corrupted by Europan ideals and has never been the same from its original purpose of peace and love (now used to mongor fear it seems, at least politically). Thus, the image of Christ shifted from his actual his dark hair and dark skin to a aryan like model of what Europe wanted Jesus to be. Kind of like how many African Americans have a black Santa Claus for their own families purposes.
Randall-
That is crazy! It makes my mind overload and want to shut down. Now I have something to research during downtime at work.
Thanks.
Bruno: Yes, yes. I was more referring to the idea that he could/would travel thousands and thousands of miles, from the area roughly *****ogous to the Roman empire to the far east (i.e. China, Japan, Tibet, etc.). Oh, and technically speaking, people of middle-eastern descent are considered caucasian. So most likely Jesus was caucasian, though he was not european or "aryan" causcasian.
SocialButterfly: This image of Jesus comes from Europe being the major power center of the church for the dominant part of the last 2 millenia, and the center for religious iconography, which means it only makes sense that white europeans' Jesus would also be a white european. Of course, I'm sure you already knew this.
Additional feather to the hat of Listvers, Congrats jf.
SlickWilly:
You're off on this "caucasian" idea, Slick.
First of all, let's remember that the idea of distinguishable "races" of human beings is not really a scientific one. "Race" is not accepted in science because the variables are too great–there is no way to define it.
But when they say that the bodies were caucasian, they DO mean that they were apparently consistent with European/non-Mediterranean types. This Jesus was certainly not. The people of the Middle East (with some exceptions) are generally *Semitic.* Jesus would have been Semitic. The bodies found were not, at least they do not match the overall "type* for that particular ethnic group.
ravethewave:
Yeah, it's amazing. To me, it's astounding.
This kind of stuff fascinates me, we believe that we know so much, yet there is so much out there we have no idea about. And somethings we may never know the full story.
SlickWilly: I did know that the European countries were behind the general image of Jesus, what I was pointing out was the idea that as all knowing and intelligent as the world has become, they still have not recognized it in the major Christian religions as far as I understand. For people who believe, this should not be a problem as the message should be most important to them not his background, yet they still do not recognize it and so Jesus continues to resemble those upright rebels behind the Starbucks counter.
Randall: I think I may have misplaced the Caucasus region in my mind as a lot farther east than it was. That was my mistake. I was talking more along the lines of those people from that particular region, not as the term pertains to race. But my geography has always been a bit spotty. Thanks for the correction.
*yawn*
SocialButterfly: Haha! Most times, if I'm with someone who will get the reference, I'll make a remark about Jesus looking an awful lot like Frank Zappa.
very interesting stuff, these kind of lists are always my favorite. i just took a class about language and writing in history and it seems really odd to me that a society way out in the pacific would have with them written language…..
i think it could be a mystery in itself just how/why people in the ancient pacific island hopped the way they did. why did they jump into their canoes and row hundreds if not thousands of miles sometimes to places where they couldnt have even known existed…
Eric:
For the same reason we went to the moon and send robots to Mars and out in space. We're an adventuresome, exploration-minded species. We should pat ourselves on the back.
But take a look at my post above (#3) if you're interested in languages and writing in regards to the Easter islanders…
By the way… I should have also mentioned that the language of the Indus Valley civilization is ALSO untranslated.
where the hell's roanoke?
I remember reading somewhere about the peat bog bodies being twisted and appearing to have been tortured due to the way the peat settled around them. I cant remember where I read this but Im sure it was some sort of scientific journal maybe even a National Geographic. If I can find the reference Ill post it here for everyone.
I've never heard any of these but the first one is way weird. They just dissapeared? Well I should probably go back and read the whole thing before asking questions…but wow. That weird.
Fortunately, I can in fact solve #10. I have mastered that written language, and here for you now is the translation that has been sought for centuries:
"Can you add me to your MyRock friends list?"
Great list!
We talked about the Carnac stones in my Art History class at uni, but the prof never mentioned the possiblity of it serving as an earthquake detector!
The Indus Valley Civilization sounds a little too "Eden" like. If there truly was no army, no slaves, and no conflicts they would have been wiped out by the first band of marauders that coveted what they had. It appears human nature has changed little over the millennia.
wow
very funny dragon. #6 looks like some sort of graveyard, similiar to veteran's cemataries.
Always interested in civilizations like #1. Reminds everyone history didn't start in 1900. (plumbing, irrigation, etc.)
Very interesting list. never heard of most of these.
Randall
If my memory serves me correctly, the terms caucasoid, negroid, mongoloid, and australoid are used to define the general cranial features of populations of different geographical areas. Caucasoid is roughly *****ogous to the European features commonly associated with the "white race" (and I use that term in the loosest sense, as scientifically there are no divisible races). Perhaps that's what SlickWilly was referring to when he described Jesus as being "caucasian". Or not. Maybe I'm just reaching for no reason. Okay, I'm really bored at the moment, so I'm trying to interject in a potentially interesting debate. Why else would I be defending someone online that I don't even know and will most likely never meet? I need a life.
Oh, great list.
8rustystaples; I need a life too. I'm actually disappointed that no-one has come back to tell me why my conclusions are unscientific, or I misstated facts, or I'm wrong,,or something..
I think I'll go do dishes….
Mom424–I think what the author meant was that there was no EVIDENCE of there being an army, slaves, or conflicts. That's strange, because like you said, they would have been wiped out. I think they were just using it as an example of why they're considered a "missing" civilization.
Also, if I remember correctly, isn't the popular image of Jesus based off of a European king?
I think Gavin Menzies in his book about Chinese travel in the 1400's discusses a script which is located on stones in various locations. If I recall correctly, Easter Island is one of those places. The script is related to that of one found in India.
Tyree; I believe you may be correct on the Jesus thing. I know it says no evidence etc, but usually they find something that indicates those things. I was really just making a point about human nature. What someone else gots, we want.
i love this stuff
Very nice list.
Thank you,
I always love having things that might one day help me in a Trivia game,
=]
Great list!
robin hood has an epitaph dated 1247
it says his name is "robert, earl of huntingdon"
it's written in some crazy-ass english, but i've read that the english written on it doesn't match the english that was used in 1247, so maybe it's a fake.
I just want to give a huge thank you to the European d-bags who fuqed up the rest of the world with thier colonization and attempt to erase the civilizations of the places they invaded. Bravo!
Like the list,hate the small font.
OOO we talked about the indus ppl in history class. I was told their population "disappeared" due to drought due to lack of a monsoon season and drying up of the near by streams. They didnt suddenly dissapear…more so they just faded away
I have now increased the size of the comments font. I have left the size of the article as I think it should be large enough for everyone to read comfortably now.
Another great list Jamie. I haven't heard of most of these, but given the number of books in my library dedicated to this subject, I probably should have. Note to self – more time reading, less time listversing……..Nah!!
You know, with those bog bodies… I don't understand how a corpse could become so well preserved when situated in such a damp environment as a bog or wetland. I would think these conditions would make optimal breeding grounds for bacteria involved in decomposition, yet the preservation of the bodies, right up to the detail on the man's face is remarkable. Can someone explain how this can happen?
The fall of the Roman empire is no mystery really (there were many reasons for it, but nothing mysterious) while the Minoans were not invaded by Greeks – it was the Mycenaeans…
jasontimer -http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bog_body
this describes it better. its all about the conditions and the elements and whatnot.
wow-that gave me a lot of reading material! What a great list. Kudos once again!
8rustystaples:
The terms caucasoid, mongoloid, etc. are long obsolete. Science has never accepted them anyway, but today they're not even remotely viewed as legit.
Now yes, some anthropologists still will make generalizations about ethnicity based on skull shapes. But the exactness of this is always hugely debatable and many such judgements have been called into question.
I know what you're saying, but still can't agree.
Did Jesus look like those people we generally tend to think come from China, Japan, or Southeast Asia? No, probably not. Did he look like a Polynesian or Australian Aborigine? No, probably not. Did he look like the people we generally refer to as "black"? No, probably not. Did he have blonde hair and blue eyes? No, probably not. But then note that even *these* generalizations are just that—generalizations. It's hard to even say what THEY mean.
This is all we can say about what Jesus looked like. Period.
If you read thor heyerdahl's Aku Aku you will find all you need to know about the Easter Islander's past, written from a layman's perspective. It goes into the Rongo rongo text a little, and this text most likely corresponds to a race of people that were killed in a war by the ancestors of the current population. The statues that most people know easter island for, resemble these earlier people, so the book says. The war where they were all killed was chilling to read. They were literally herded into one corner of the island and burned in a pit.
Earlier Eric asked why and how these islanders made their way to these islands. The answer, once again can be explained not in people rowing with canoes and being blown off course, but by ancient civilisations with very good navigation skills, ie *****tants and starcharts, sending out rafts specially designed for drifting with the current. Heyerdahl was able to prove that a balsa raft from Peru could sail westwards and drift across a whole ocean and land, depending on which branch of current, on a whole range of different island groups. He also sailed a papyrus ship from egypt out to Easter island.
Barnacle; didn't I read that there was something a little hinky about Thor Heyerdahl's expeditions? I kind of recall his theories being discounted due to dna evidence or something of that ilk.
make that last line "He also sailed a papyrus ship from Morocco to barbados, crossing the atlantic"
Mom424: Maybe i need to read some more recent books. At the very least he did prove that if you picked the right current and used the ship designs available, instead of catching a current that would sweep you back to the continent, you could go a long way.
Barnacle; Its still a tres-cool adventure even if the science was a little off.