10 More Unsolved Mysteries
Published on April 6, 2008 - 213 Comments
This is now the fourth of our unsolved mysteries lists, but this one is different. It was submitted by a reader and so, while it does cover at least one topic previously covered, it gives a different (and I think more interesting) perspective. So settle back and enjoy yet another 10 unsolved mysteries.
The placebo effect is when a person takes something they believe is medicine for an ailment they are suffering (which is not really a medicine), and they get better. A placebo is an inert substance, and when taken (with the advice from others that it will cure them) makes the person get better, simply because they were expecting or believed that it would work. Something similar, called the nocebo effect, is when a person takes fake drugs and thinks they are experiencing problems that would have been caused by the real drugs. They have been known to reduce pain as well. Why they occur is mysterious and they are only one of the many complicated things related to the body-brain connection. In fact, our own bodies hold many unsolved mysteries.
How did life on earth appear? Science suggests that life started when the planet was favourable for habitation. Yet did microscopic organisms just pop out of nowhere? One hypothesis is panspermia, which suggests that ‘seeds of life’ exist everywhere around the universe, and that life on earth started when these ‘seeds’ came here, probably by a meteor. It also suggests that these seeds are taken to other habitable places in the universe. Something similar to this is exo-genesis. It suggests that life was brought to earth those billions of years ago, however it does not say that life is also taken to other habitable places. Some people believe aliens brought life to our planet, as suggested by the theories of Erich Von Daniken. Although some are sceptical as to how life could exist in space and get carried to other planets, there is substantial evidence that certain life forms, like spores and certain types of bacteria can actually exist in space, perhaps in a dormant state.
From the death of the dinosaurs, to the disappearance of the creatures in the Permian Era, mass extinctions are occurring even now. Sometimes, the cause is clear. We are destroying the biosphere and the atmosphere, and scientists predict that in the next 100 years, 50% of all living species will become extinct. But sometimes, the real reason is unclear. It may have been due to competition from other species, dramatic climate changes, or the impacts from an asteroid/meteor (the last one being quite a popular one). Yet some questions remain unanswered. Why was it that some species died out, and others survived, some to this day (famous example: the coelacanth). During the extinction of the dinosaurs, crocodiles and turtles were around, but they survived, even to this day, while the dinosaurs, the pterosaurs, the marine reptiles and others died out. While some people believe that those species were unable to cope with the (possibly) new surroundings, others are not convinced. To this day, they are a mystery, and without a time machine, we may never know. Other popular theories include:- flood basalt events, smaller asteroid showers, global warming/cooling, sea level drops.
Haitan vodou, part of their religious practices, has long been considered to be evil. And the base of this suspicion is that the vodou is used to create zombies. Not zombies as in Hollywood zombies. Not animated brain sucking zombies. Zombies like, sub-conscious humans who do everything they are told. Wade Davis, a Canadian ethno-biologist, uncovered a lot of info on this. Apparently, it originated in Africa, and two drugs (or poisons) are inserted into the victim’s bloodstream. One creates a deathlike trance, and one makes the victim seem like they have no brain of their own, thus rendering them able to do whatever they are told. 3 important facts Davis found was:- zombification is not random, it is not common, and it is used as a kind of severe punishment, most likely to those that have broken the sacred vodou laws.
Ever learned something without really understanding how you know it? That’s intuition. Sometimes called a sixth sense or gut feelings, intuition is the ability to acquire knowledge without a clear source or without reasoning it. Some people claim that they get a feeling that someone is watching them, and they look around and find that somebody is, or was, watching them. Or a police officer may look at some suspects for a crime and somehow know which one is guilty, and later discover they were right. Though some people say that these things are all coincidences, others believe that the human brain has a special ability to get knowledge around them without conscious realization. It is another mystery of the human mind.
What makes this year so special? The fact that the Olympics are taking place in London? No. The ancient Maya civilization, from Central America, had a special calendar that was mind-blowingly accurate. And it predicted that the end of the human life cycle was on December 21st, 2012, the winter solstice. The Mayans were also good at math and astrology(they accurately predicted an eclipse that occurred hundred of years later). So people are guessing that they were right about the end of the world thing, too. Something else that has gotten scientists curious is that there are some major astronomical things happening in 2012. Apart from the occasional eclipse and comet, the entire solar system is supposed to pass through the center of our galaxy, something that happens only once every 26,000 years. And, there’s a risk of our planet’s poles switching. Sounds crazy, but scientists say this has already happened. Also, the Indian calendar, the Kali Yuga, ends at about the same time. Coincidence? I think not.
Exoplanets, short for extra-solar planets, are planets beyond the solar system. There are 277 recorded exoplanets to date. However, there is no confirmation that there is life on any of them, or in the universe, for that matter. However, it is still a mystery. This is different from UFOs as UFO are unidentified flying objects, meaning something unidentified that has been seen on earth. Some likely candidates for supporting life are Gliese 581 d and HD 189733 b, the latter supposedly containing water vapour and organic matter. There are also questions as to whether there are moons orbiting these planets. Some people believe that there may even be life in our solar system that we don’t know of. Some moons, like Neptune’s Triton or Saturn’s Europa, may possible have, or had, life, and there is substantial evidence that water once flowed through Mars. Still, no one knows.
Etched into the earth on the Nazca Plains in Peru are giant symbols drawn perfectly straight. Some are hundreds of metres long. They look as if they were drawn by some giant hand two thousand years ago. And the strange thing is, they can only be seen from the air. So how did the ancient Nazcans draw them? Researchers say they could have created hot air balloon or kites to fly and view their work. Indeed, an experiment was carried out and it proved that the Nazcans could have made a working balloon. The symbols themselves are of animals and plants. Yet some are long strips of land without any direct meaning. A writer named Erich Von Daniken believed that these were landing strips for alien spacecraft, and that aliens could have drawn them. They may also be for contacting these aliens. Maria Reiche, an astronomer, says that these lines may be used as a calendar, or to keep track of the stars and planets. There is a monkey drawing that has a coiled tail that looks similar to the orbital lines of our solar system. There are even more obscure theories that suggest that there were giant people 2,000 years ago. Yet, they are still a mystery.
A megalithic structure is some thing big made of rock. It could be a statue, or just some rocks strewn around in a pattern. The truly mysterious thing about the ancients is, how were they able to create such enormous things? They did not have the technology needed to efficiently make them. Stonehenge is a good example. A bigger one is the Great Pyramid in Giza, or the pyramids themselves. Sometimes, even their purpose is unclear (Stonehenge), while other times, the structures in question are mysterious and seemingly supernatural (the pyramids). A megalith (I know, sounds like something from Di-Gata Defenders), a giant rock, is used most of the time, especially in the case of Stonehenge and the Carnac stones. Still, there are a few megalithic structures that are not mysterious (like Great Zimbabwe), but mostly it seems impossible that the ancients made these things themselves. Now, many would like to think aliens helped them. Yet even scientists say queerer things. They suggest that there may have been a lost ancient civilization that was extremely advanced, and they may have given later civilizations the knowledge to build such things. Yet there is no substantial evidence of either. Other examples: Easter Island Heads, Pyramid of the Sun (in Mesoamerica), other pyramids in central and south America, Colossus of Rhodes.
The universe is vast and unknown. It holds many mysteries. And possibly the biggest mystery is how the universe was created. Scientists have suggested that there was a massive explosion billions of years ago called The Big Bang. That theory is now generally accepted, and scientists are looking for trails of energy left behind from the colossal explosion that created a trillion stars. Yet there is no absolute proof. But the creation of the universe is something too big to happen so simply. Religious folks will say God/Allah/Vishnu created the universe. But scientists will say that there was a Big Bang, and that there is energy from the bang moving through the universe, and they are trying to locate the epicentre. So, the debate continues. Religion vs. Science is probably the biggest conflict in the world. But what is religion? There are so many different types. And the difference between the Christian religion and Greek mythology? No one believes in Greek mythology anymore. But what is science? And math? Things created by man. So before saying that man created God and science proves it, people should realize man created science as well. And maybe, the universe is just something made up in our minds.
Contributor: Ghidoran
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1. geert - April 6th, 2008 at 4:49 am
no evidence of big bang? what then, i ask, is cosmic microwave background radiation?
no evidence of dinosaurs? discarding the ridiculous argument that god planted fossils to test our faith, I think giant skeletons make it pretty clear that there were dinosaurs.
nice list tho!
2. Harsha - April 6th, 2008 at 4:55 am
Real nice list!! BTW the part where it says the Indian calendar ends on 2012 does not necessarily mean end of the world, it means dawn of a new era(yuga), there has been already a dozen of these eras.
3. cheese - April 6th, 2008 at 4:56 am
wow.
this is an incredible list.
the placebo effect certainly does make you think about the power of thinking. (no pun intended)
also that 2012 is just creepy.
4. jfrater - April 6th, 2008 at 5:00 am
hmmm… gearing up for another controversial one methinks
5. mick - April 6th, 2008 at 5:07 am
geert—>
Nice Bill Hicks quote!
6. King of the Horizon - April 6th, 2008 at 5:13 am
in the Nazca lines bit shouldnt it read ‘can only be seen from the air’ instead of ‘cannot be seen from the air’
7. lola - April 6th, 2008 at 5:27 am
I had never heard of the 2012 world ending theory, I thought that we overcame that in 2000. Well I certainly am a tad frightened now. Goodness!
8. MichyMoonshine - April 6th, 2008 at 5:31 am
“And maybe, the universe is just something made up in our minds.”
I love that possibility…
That nothing actually exists =]
When I was little (about seven), I used to think that my life was just a story in a book, and some creature from another planet was reading it…
And the only actual mind that “existed” was mine, because it was first person narrative, and you could only read my mind…
I was a fairly weird child =]
9. leesh - April 6th, 2008 at 5:32 am
hmmm…
got me thinking about how the universe was made… or maybe it wasnt… maybe it just is there n stuff… lol makes more sense in my head
10. Vespoidea - April 6th, 2008 at 6:02 am
The sentence about the monkey in the Nazca lines bit also doesnt make sense.
But a great list overall though!
11. Tonny SS - April 6th, 2008 at 6:05 am
Hmm, I’m pretty sure 2012 theory was already debunked as a mistranslation.
12. Tonny SS - April 6th, 2008 at 6:06 am
Here it is, from USA Today.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/s.....2012_n.htm
“For the ancient Maya, it was a huge celebration to make it to the end of a whole cycle,” says Sandra Noble, executive director of the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies in Crystal River, Fla. To render Dec. 21, 2012, as a doomsday or moment of cosmic shifting, she says, is “a complete fabrication and a chance for a lot of people to cash in.”
13. Tonny SS - April 6th, 2008 at 6:10 am
It was a rare day for astronomy, but the Maya didn’t imply Doomsday at all, rather it was modern conspiracy theorist.
14. Lewis_RATM - April 6th, 2008 at 6:19 am
I don’t believe the end of the world thing but what does it mean passing through the centre of the galaxy?
15. acronyx - April 6th, 2008 at 6:23 am
great list!! especially the placebo, 2012 and the last one
16. some guy - April 6th, 2008 at 6:47 am
Good list.
Placebo’s aren’t that mysterious to me, but that might just be how my mind works.
And also, this is the earliest I’ve posted on a list
17. Namowal - April 6th, 2008 at 6:54 am
Who says the solar system is passing through the center of the galaxy? By 2012? We’re nowhere close, nor are we heading that direction.
18. JT - April 6th, 2008 at 6:58 am
This is a great list, and here are a few thoughts I had.
1. The amount of times you mentioned von Daniken disturbs me…you’re not into Vessliovsky and Acharya S too are you?
2. The ‘entire solar system passing through the centre of the galaxy’ thing occurs on the vernal equinox only, and isn’t scheduled to happen until 2160 at the earliest, and 2600 at the latest iirc (atsronomers are very sketchy on precession timetables) However, I’m damn sure 2012 is too early for a shift to the age of Aquarius, and it would be visible on the vernal equinox, not the winter solstice. This also assumes that the Mayans ahve been cataloguing this for 26,000 years. Maybe someone with more knwoledge on this could correct me.
3. It’s know widely accepted that Stonehenge was used a kind of astronomical observatory used to calculate solstices and equinoxes, as the stones line up exactly for that purpose. However, beyond that it remains unclear, although many Pagan religions held such events to be religious in nature and so it probably doubled as a temple. Furthermore, the blue stones from the Preselli mountains may have been seen by the ancients as having mystical, healing properties, making something like a ancient Lourdes for Pagans. It’s still quite speculative though.
19. sid - April 6th, 2008 at 7:07 am
Kinda of an averagely done list, i quite agree with 16# “some guy” bout placebos, it’s just our brain that release the feel good chemicals which boost the immune system.Although i think the human mind would be the biggest unsolved mystery to crack in this century.
20. jfrater - April 6th, 2008 at 7:21 am
sid: I agree - I think man will be a very different creature when we finally untap the full potential of the brain.
JT: I loved reading Daniken books as a kid and really hoped it was all true. Then I grew up.
21. billywitchdoctordotcom - April 6th, 2008 at 7:32 am
I know I’m a little late to this thread but as a child I felt along the same lines as you, MichyMoonshine =)…. sometimes I’m not so sure I was wrong=)
22. EricB - April 6th, 2008 at 7:40 am
“And the difference between the Christian religion and Greek mythology? No one believes in Greek mythology anymore.”
Love that quote!
great list, i love these mystery ones.
23. Ghidoran - April 6th, 2008 at 7:54 am
JT(and some other people): You’r right, the passing through the centre of the galaxy is quite debated. Who knows. Maybe I’ve got the wrong sources. Also, Stoneheng is just one of the mysteries. Oh yeah, I have no idea what Vessliovsky and Acharya S are.
I never said that there is no proof for the Big Bang, just we don’t know for sure. And mybe it’s nt what we think.
Oh yeah, jfrater, didn’t you say you were going to omit some stuff?
24. Mom424 - April 6th, 2008 at 8:00 am
Ghidoran; Interesting list. The ancients used a “Merchet” to plot extra long lines. A tall stick with a notch in the top made perfectly vertical using a plumb bob, placed on a high spot, line up the notches. Amazing accurate over huge distances.
Michymoonshine; I used to imagine/worry that I was just somebody’s dream. Get into a panic over it almost. What if the other guy woke up? I was a weird kid too.
jfrater; ditto on on von Daniken comment
25. Mom424 - April 6th, 2008 at 8:03 am
Ghidoran; My comment doesn’t lessen the mystery of the Nazca lines. We still don’t know why.
26. chestah - April 6th, 2008 at 8:13 am
I’ve been reading the site for quite a while and love it, but as an (almost) astronomer, I just had to sign up and comment on this list.
From Wikipedia, the Sun (and therefore solar system) is 26000 light-years from the center of the galaxy. So to reach the center of the galaxy in the next 4 years, it would have to travel at 6500 times the speed of light! From JT’s comments, I think what you mean is that the planets will be lined up in an arrow facing the center of the galaxy… which is a completely different thing and not all that exciting.
There also seems to be some confusion about the big bang. The cosmic microwave background is quite good evidence that the big bang did occur. It occurred about 300000 years after the big bang, but because it is a perfect black body and because of various properties of it (temperature, peaks and dips), 99% of astronomers are confident that the big bang happened. There is also not an epicenter to the big bang. When it occurred, the entire universe was condensed into a tiny volume. Afterwards everything basically stayed in the same place except that the space between objects got larger and larger. So the big bang happened everywhere at once.
Anyway, those are just some minor things that annoy probably only me. Again, love the website.
27. John - April 6th, 2008 at 8:16 am
I’m pretty sure that jfrater created the universe.
Well,
The List Universe at least.
(:
and
I graduate in 2012!
oh noes!
28. 80s - April 6th, 2008 at 8:30 am
For part 4, You mean Jupiter’s Moon Europa and Saturns moon TITAN. I can’t believe this feel through whatever filters it passed through to get posted on the site and that 27 posters down, I’m the only one that noticed?
We think these life on these moons is possible because Europa is mainly water ice and liquid water, the universal solvent one of the prerequisites for life, and Titan is rich in hydrcarbon compounds. The probe sent there recently took pictures of a thick, cloudy atmosphere with hydrocarbon clouds, drifting high above methan lakes with discernable coastlines. Hydrogen and carbon (hydrocrabons) is what all organic matter on Earth is made of.
29. Canuck - April 6th, 2008 at 8:48 am
I’m with you 80s, I can’t believe that it made it this far to notice that error, especially the Europa one. That’s one of the most well known of Jupiter’s moons, isn’t it?
30. Steve T. - April 6th, 2008 at 8:54 am
Re Stonehenge and megaliths, the list says the ancients had no way to build them “efficiently.” But who says they thought about efficiency the way we do? Their methods didn’t have to be efficient, just possible.
The mystery may have been solved by Wally Wallington in Michigan, a retired construction worker. While he can’t prove it actually WAS done his way, he’s shown that you CAN move very large and heavy objects using only stones, planks of wood, rope, sand and water, all available to the Stonehenge builders. It’s done with leverage and a great deal of patience.
In this video (sorry I don’t know how to make it a link, but you can cut and paste) Wallington by himself upends a ten ton concrete block from horizontal to vertical, one end embedded in a pit and packed with earth to keep it stable. Granted, the Stonehenge stones are much heavier, but he’s only one man, not a team. There are still a lot of questions to be answered, but he proves you don’t HAVE to invoke aliens or mysterious lost civilizations to get the job done.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRRDzFROMx0
31. JC - April 6th, 2008 at 8:54 am
NONE of you exist!
The Universe is one grand fabricated dream that I am creating!
OR MAYBE I’m in a coma, and the scientists are creating all of this….
But crappy editing in this list. CRAPPY CRAPPY!!!
Nazca Lines “They look as if they were drawn be some giants…” Not be BY!!!!!
Creation of the Universe “And the possibly the biggest mystery..” should be And possibly!!!!! GET IT RIGHT!
There are many other mistakes but i just don’t want to correct them right now.
BAD LIST!!!! RUINING A GOOD TOPIC!!!
32. Steve T. - April 6th, 2008 at 8:55 am
P.S. Whoa! It turned into a link after all! Very clever, Mr. Frater.
33. 80s - April 6th, 2008 at 9:05 am
Yes, Canuck, it’s of the 4 largest of Jupiter’s moons.
Also, worth mentioning is that there’s evidence that liquid water still flows on Mars during changes of the seasons (NASA photographs show previously unseen grooves carved by a liquid appearing when they take pictures of the same spot a few months or years later).
34. Brian - April 6th, 2008 at 9:09 am
We have # 7 here in America except we use Fox News instead of poisons.
35. Lizim - April 6th, 2008 at 9:18 am
Brian: How true is that! My mother in law has some sort of weird lust/reverence for Bill O’Reilly that has made the rest of the family want to leave her on a desert island.
36. Sandy - April 6th, 2008 at 9:21 am
Most of these “mysteries” are not mysterious at all. The answers exist if one does just a little bit of research.
Most people have not been taught how to conduct research, so I lay
no blame at anyone’s feet. It makes me sad. We have the ability, but too few have been instructed in how to uncover the knowledge.
***
8. MichyMoonshine - April 6th, 2008 at 5:31 am
(deleted some good stuff to keep the size of this comment under control)
“When I was little (about seven), I used to think that my life was just a story in a book, and some creature from another planet was reading it…
And the only actual mind that “existed” was mine, because it was first person narrative, and you could only read my mind…
I was a fairly weird child =]”
Michy! I had a similar idea when very young. In mine, my existence was the only real one; Everyone and everything else was a product of my imagination…so I guess I was fairly weird, too.
37. Anna - April 6th, 2008 at 9:25 am
“During the extinction of the dinosaurs, crocodiles and turtles were around, but they survived, even to this day, while the dinosaurs, the pterosaurs, the marine reptiles and others died out.”
This part I think is quite simple to explain. Crocodiles and a lot of turtles are amphibious. Thus when the water was too hot or cold, they’d live on the land, whereas marine reptiles would have no choice. And vice versa with the pterosaurs.
In addition, crocodiles and turtles survived because they eat almost anything.
Awesome list!
38. Timburon - April 6th, 2008 at 9:56 am
Great list!
All the comments about us being in someone elses dream or story makes me think of an episode of the Twilight Zone, where a man is about to be executed but everyone else in the world only exists in his consciousness, so if he dies, the whole world dies as well!
Still gives me the shivers!
39. CraZHorse - April 6th, 2008 at 10:03 am
The solar system is going to pass through the center of the galaxy? This is a very misleading statement, there’s no way the solar system is actually going through the center of the galaxy. First of all, there’s a big black hole there, and the toll to get through one of those isn’t exactly cheap. Second, we’re going in a circle around the galactic center, with inertia keeping us very far from the middle.
The 26,000 year thing is probably referring to the longest natural cycle known to man, precession. This is the time it takes for the north pole of Earth to trace out a circle in the sky. Since the Earth is tipped on its axis, the north pole is not permanent. Right now it’s very close to the star Polaris, but in just a few hundred years there will be a noticeable difference in the celestial north pole.
This entry in the list was frankly disappointing. These are pretty simple and well known facts that were completely botched. Otherwise it was solid.
40. Ghidoran - April 6th, 2008 at 10:08 am
80s: I am not a Canuck. I was born in Bangladesh, not Canada! And anyways, THANK YOU for pointing that out. And I meant Neptune’s moon Triton, but Satun’s Titan is still good.
Also, people do know how Stonehenge was built(sort of). It’s WHY that’s the question. I meant more complex structures like the Pyramids.
JC: thanks for pointing those out. I hope JFrater fixes them.
41. Nick - April 6th, 2008 at 10:25 am
Great list,ive questioned the existance of everything being real or fake,some experiment of some sort or my own visual schizophrenia,again,great list,AND I HOPE SO BAD the world will not go down the crapper in 2012,my sister just had a baby and i want her to turn at least…80! before she dies!
42. TerranRich - April 6th, 2008 at 10:46 am
Okay, about the solar system passing through the center of the galaxy…
Right now, the Solar System is about 2/3 of the width of the galaxy away from its center. If the galaxy is 100,000 LY (light years) in diameter, Being 2/3 away from the center would put us about 33,333 LY away from it. For us to pass through the center, we would have to travel over 33,000 LY. Since nothing can travel faster than the speed of light, it would take us at least 33,000 years to pass through that distance.
The word “center” alone means the absolute center of the galaxy’s mass.
43. TerranRich - April 6th, 2008 at 10:46 am
Oh, and when I was a kid, I used to imagine that I was the only “real” person, as I could only see things from my perspective.
Then, for quite a time, I’d imagine my life was a TV show. I would narrate things to myself while alone sometimes.
44. jfrater - April 6th, 2008 at 11:31 am
ooh - we are only 120 comments away from our 50 thousandth comment!
45. Ghidoran - April 6th, 2008 at 11:51 am
Those 120 better be on this one!
46. jfrater - April 6th, 2008 at 11:54 am
Ghidoran: I agree totally
47. legend - April 6th, 2008 at 12:01 pm
Everything must have a beginning. It must have been created. The only thing or person that doesn’t have to have a beginning is God. So, the only logical premise is that God made everything.
48. Carrie - April 6th, 2008 at 12:07 pm
You lost all credibility the second you mentioned von Daniken.
49. Anna - April 6th, 2008 at 12:14 pm
legend: Can we not start that please.
50. Yogi Barrister - April 6th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
Legend, I can’t argue against your premise, but you still need to ask how God created the universe. Did God just wave a magic wand and presto, everything appeared exactly as it is now? I contend that if God exists, the best way to understand him/her/it is through math and science. Theology is too self-centered and self-referential to be of much use.
51. flgh - April 6th, 2008 at 12:17 pm
Do you know that it was Georges Lemaître, a Belgian Roman Catholic priest, who proposed the Big Bang theory, & it’s physicists & astronomers who criticize it?
52. Ghidoran - April 6th, 2008 at 12:22 pm
flgh: I never knew that.
53. goof_ball - April 6th, 2008 at 12:28 pm
#1 really makes you think. If 2012 IS the end of the world it will really suck because I graduate in 2012.
54. Crimanon - April 6th, 2008 at 12:29 pm
I know what I’m doing the three days until 12/21/2012. Kegger!
55. billyshears - April 6th, 2008 at 12:30 pm
great list!

i didn’t know about the zombies in haiti thing!!
56. Mark - April 6th, 2008 at 12:30 pm
legend, why doesnt a god have to have a beginning?
I like the idea of 2012..as in, i find it interesting not ‘I like how the world is going to end in a few years’
conspiracy theories are fun: some people think we are gonna end the world with that particle accelerator in europe, ummm apparently the earth is hollow and some ancients live in it.. yehh thats all ive got.
in relation to this list.
I believe we wont ever figure out how the universe was created…well not im my/our life time..which is sad =(
p.s
make another mysteries list NOW!
57. Blackwaffle - April 6th, 2008 at 12:31 pm
Ants and bees make extraordinarily complex structures. Perhaps early humans had a similar instinctual knack for engineering that we have somehow lost.
58. Mark - April 6th, 2008 at 12:33 pm
Crimanon.
hell yeh. clubs are gonna make heaps of cash hosting end of the world parties
59. Yogi Barrister - April 6th, 2008 at 12:34 pm
Ghidoran, thanks for using the word panspermia, I never heard that one before. I always refer to the beginning of life on Earth as a quickening. I believe inorganic chemicals were in close proximity somewhere in the ocean and some kind of energy acted upon them. Or perhaps it was sperm(space dust) from outer space finding a hospitable environment.
What I don’t understand about the theory of evolution is why this quickening can only have occurred once, and then everything evolved from that. Why couldn’t inorganic chemicals be turned into life many times, or if there is space sperm, why can’t it be falling to Earth now? Why does the Theory of Evolution require that all life on Earth evolved from one occurrence?
60. Crimanon - April 6th, 2008 at 12:39 pm
9, 8, 5, 4, and 1 are theories. Thought of but never seen.
61. StinkyTheCat - April 6th, 2008 at 12:43 pm
Can i make note that the most recent “Zombie Activity” was reported in Los Angeles i believe in about ‘92 or ‘94. Of course, authorities covered it up by saying the witnesses were on drugs. however, the group that experienced it was about 120 guys. hmmmm….
62. Mark - April 6th, 2008 at 12:47 pm
A bit more info on that particle accelerator (in case no1 knows) :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fJ6PMfnz2E
its fascinating . Its gonna be turned on soon =D
63. Mavoonie - April 6th, 2008 at 1:12 pm
ok the whole 2012 hting is really an iffy subject. a turor from my school and me had a big debate on how it could or couldnt be true, and lemme tell u, the debate spanned the whole hour and 30 mins of our class time lol i still dont believe it to be true tho =]
64. Mavoonie - April 6th, 2008 at 1:13 pm
my bad for the bad spelling lol i was typing fast so the words spelled wrong are
Turor=tutor and hting=thing lol sry for the misspellings
65. Jono - April 6th, 2008 at 1:16 pm
Nice list, but a few of those entries are not even mysteries. The Haitian zombies, that’s been understood for years now.
Placebo effect, that’s always been attributed to the power of positive thinking and will-power. What isn’t known is how thinking positively actually has effects that are positive.
66. Csimmons - April 6th, 2008 at 1:34 pm
Here’s my rundown of these,
10)I don’t know why Placebos work, I guess the brain can heal the body from some bad stuff when it takes a pill and thinks it will help.
9)If I even knew how to pronounce it, I still wouldn’t believe it, I’ve always thought that life started from a single-cell organism and evolved(evolution)from there. And how could life survive in space? Maybe spores but those would burn up on entry into a planet.
8)I’m saying most pre-historic extinctions happened because of that huge comet the size of Texas or because of predators, no real mystery there.
7)Okay, that’s weird.
6)Yep, it’s all coincidence, I could probably guess the winner of the next Super Bowl and be right, all coincidence.
5)Okay, the Mayans were right about a lot of stuff, and I personally think they are wrong on this one, because through out time, countless people have predicted the end of the world, all wrong. And it better not end then, Christmas is 4 days after
4)I buy this one, it’s very possible with the right conditions.
3)Nazca lines are like the first crop circles, all were planned out.
2)I think any one could re-create the pyramids if they had all the labor the Egyptians had, or make stonehenge if they could make ramps and had people holding the rocks. All without tools.
1)Big-bang, that’s my guess, I personally belive that because out of all the theorys, it makes more since and there’s still proof that it happened.
there’s my 2 cents.
67. Alex T. - April 6th, 2008 at 2:22 pm
My whole opinion on 2012: If we were really being propelled toward our intimate doom as some believe, why try to keep up with everything? Why have kids in school if they’ll never graduate or live lives? If indeed we all have 4 years to live, then most of society would just fall apart. Heck, if I was going to die, the first thing I would do is take all the money out of my account and just splurge on everything I ever wanted, now or never style. Anyways, with that being said, I sort of wonder what the mass hysteria will be like. I could see the people locking themselves in basements with survival kits and then… boom? A year 2000 like moment of realization.
68. Ben Heitzman - April 6th, 2008 at 2:58 pm
Or the Mayans just ran out of stone.
69. BOB123 - April 6th, 2008 at 5:10 pm
i think the placebo effect is just mind blowing.
i think that is what was going on with the whole airborne craze, people were being told that it prevents sickness and they believed it, therefore the didn’t get sick.
our minds and bodies are some confusing and astonishing things, and i love it!
70. Nick - April 6th, 2008 at 5:40 pm
Goofball:I graduate in 2012 too!
71. Chelley - April 6th, 2008 at 5:53 pm
I love how everyone is using the comments to tell you that you are completely wrong because many of these mysteries that you have of course placed on here as 100% fact are not proven or true…
Or wait, you never said anything about this being completely true! Silly me.
Nice list though - I love mysteries, especially those that deal with the human mind - we sure are strange creatures!
72. EXE - April 6th, 2008 at 6:10 pm
one thing that you forgot to say about 2012 is that it is the end of a cycle of Earth’s wobbles. Earth wobbles on its axis, and on Dec 21 2012, the Earth will finish its first cycle of its wobbles.
Other meaningful mysteries: what would I do for a Klondike bar?
How many licks does it take to get to the tootsie-roll center of a tootsie pop? Can you believe its not butter? If a tree falls in a forest, how do we know it wasn’t pushed?
73. Phillies - April 6th, 2008 at 6:16 pm
What about the great Hot Dog and Hot Dog Rolls mystery? (one is in packs of ten, the other is in packs of 8. WHY???)
74. someguy - April 6th, 2008 at 6:29 pm
u stole my name! #16
75. Anderi - April 6th, 2008 at 6:30 pm
Just a couple of things:
Firstly: Recent studies (a couple of years ago) have brought to the surface that the so called “landing strip” Nazca lines were marching paths of the shamans and kings in religious ceremonies that were used to try and draw water down from the hills and mountains during times of drought.
Also, why the hell would a spacecraft that could hover and spontaneously change direction in the blink of an eye need a landing strip?
Secondly: I’m also a frequent visitor to abovetopsecret.com and this 2012 end of the world thing is gaining a lot of momentum in the alternative topics circles. What gets me is that this is reminiscent of the y2k hysteria of 8 years ago.
People then were stocking up on water and supplies, arming themselves and learning to skin small animals for when society was surely going to collapse. Look at us now, 8 years on, and not a thing has changed. The same dodgey buggers are still in power and we’re all enjoying the computer and the internet.
Now it’s claimed that not only will 2012 be the end of us all, but that planet x, or nibiru as it’s known, will bring massive asteroids to come crashing into the earth to do it. Plus our poles will have flipped!
I’m sorry but doomsdayers make me feel bad!…
76. Juice - April 6th, 2008 at 6:33 pm
Not to be rude, but when I read this list, it felt like I was reading a fourth grade book report.
77. Ghidoran - April 6th, 2008 at 6:52 pm
EXE: You just gave me an idea for the next one…..
Juice: That’s because I tried to condense it.
78. facekickin - April 6th, 2008 at 7:09 pm
the 2012 theory is a bit fraudulent. like a car odometer, it is said that time will just roll over, start again. what’s this theory of the poles switching? that’s news to me. anyone have insight on this?
79. gravy - April 6th, 2008 at 7:45 pm
this list was pretty cool. I think the myan calendar was really interesting.
80. frozenmidwest - April 6th, 2008 at 7:59 pm
One of the poisons used in zombification (if there is such a word) ia also found in a type of fish that’s sometimes eaten in Japan.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fugu
81. davo - April 6th, 2008 at 7:59 pm
” But what is science? And math? Things created by man. So before saying that man created God and science proves it, people should realize man created science as well. And maybe, the universe is just something made up in our minds. ”
That’s a cop out answer. Religion has proved nothing (except human gullibility) Science backs itself up with fact after fact.
82. Anna - April 6th, 2008 at 8:05 pm
Csimmons: “I’m saying most pre-historic extinctions happened because of that huge comet the size of Texas or because of predators, no real mystery there.”
Only one mass extinction (the most famous one, with the dinosaurs) was caused by an asteroid. Many asteroids impacts don’t cause mass extinctions.
There are many theories on how mass extinctions are caused. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extinction_event
83. Anna - April 6th, 2008 at 8:09 pm
In an episode of the x-files, December 22, 2012 is the date of the alien invasion.
84. jasontimmer - April 6th, 2008 at 8:29 pm
EXE: #72- can you elaborate on the “cycle of wobbles” thing? I know the Earth wobbles, it’s what creates our seasons. But the Earth goes through 1 wobble a year. What is a “cycle” of wobbles?
85. Late O’Day - April 6th, 2008 at 8:55 pm
I don’t find the placebo effect very compelling. Not sure about Europe, but the US has (cough-cough) epidemic of hypochondria these days. People with gas talk themselves into thinking they have ulcers. People who don’t like cheese are suddenly lactose intolerant. People who don’t like Chinese food because they claim an MSG allergy, will chow down on on something like Parmesan that has twice as much — until informed of that fact, at which point they start coughing and scratching to make up for lost time. People with common headaches claim they’re migraines. Lazy people are conveniently susceptible to phantom back pain., etc. And don’t even get me started on anti-smoking Nazi’s, who will convulse in dramatic coughing fits if they see a “picture” of a cigarette …
In short — although the mind can do wondrous things and I do believe there is a genuine placebo effect, I suspect that a lot of it is amplified by people who are NOT really all that sick to begin with.
86. Maxx_the_Slash - April 6th, 2008 at 9:11 pm
Concerning entry 5: I don’ tthink the date of 2012 has any meaning to it at all. Ever consider that maybe whoever it was that wrote the Mayan calendar decided to stop at 2012 because they were tired or recording dates? The latest year on the calendar on my cell phone is 2079. That doesn’t mean Nokia believes that’s when the world will end.
Concerning entry 9. I’ve seen a 2 hour documentry on the History Channel called “How the Earth Was Made”. Watch it when it comes on again. It tells how conscious living and breathing beings were formed on Earth via chemical reactions caused by the planet and it’s exposure to elements from space interacting with the planet to cause said chemical reactions.
87. jasontimmer - April 6th, 2008 at 9:24 pm
Late- good point, though I think what you’re talking about is pretty much just a “reverse placebo” effect.
88. Anonymous - April 6th, 2008 at 9:29 pm
Here’s a mystery: What’s Michael J. Foxes middle initial?
Did you say J? You’re wrong, it’s actually A, which is for Andrew, go figure…
Great list!
89. travis - April 6th, 2008 at 9:37 pm
ive been reading up on the 2012 thing for awhile. its not that the solar system is moving into the center, but if you imagine the galaxy as a flat plane, the solar system wobbles up and down through what would be horrizontal to the center. this doent happen too often.
if anyone watched the lost book of nostradamus on the history hannel, it says that his final page depicts the same idea, with the date completing some sort of celestial wheel (an ancient astrological symbol). also some freaky stuff concerning 2012… a catholic st. called malachai supposedly has predicted every pope from his time until the end of time (judgement day). currently on the list, there is only one pope left after benedict.
90. MW - April 6th, 2008 at 9:44 pm
The 2012 thing is a bit silly!
It’s nothing more than a Mayan millenium, just like we went from 1999 to 2000 with no problems.
91. Tom Wang - April 6th, 2008 at 9:44 pm
I have to say that the origin of the universe is a great mystery and Hawking admits it’s the ‘biggest’ mystery as solving the ‘why’ of the universe would be like knowing the mind of God (see A Breif History of Time). Some people might say it exists because it must so that we can ask why it exists, but I see this as a cop out/circular argument. Maybe I am just bias because I’m Catholic.
If I could add an idea for the next mystery list, I would have to say that prodigy’s are an “unsolved mystery” (que Robert Stack and music). I mean the ‘naturals’ like Mozart or even Tiger Woods for example. Geniuses in their respective talent seemingly from birth. I mention those two, but there are many others that might be better choices to make the argument for the existance of ‘prodigy’.
92. Late O’Day - April 6th, 2008 at 9:48 pm
travis … I never heard of the “Malachi” prophesies until you brought it up. Found some interesting reading at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prophecy_of_the_Popes
93. simuun - April 6th, 2008 at 9:59 pm
i like how at the end you mention the fact that we may have invented god but also we invented the science that disproves it. it was an interesting list, but i’m sure people would rather debate religion instead of just reading the article. everyone is entitled to their opinion but if you’re not open to other ideas or opinions keep your own to yourselves.
94. jasontimmer - April 6th, 2008 at 11:00 pm
Homeopathy is nonsense, sorry. It’s as if, “325 mg Acetaminophen helps my headache, so I bet if I dissolve a shaving of a Tylenol in a glass of water, and set a single drop of it on my tongue, it should work even better!” Get real.
95. fabrulana - April 7th, 2008 at 12:27 am
Regarding Big Bang :
“We hear a lot about the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR): Big Bang astronomers proclaim that it proves the Ultimate Truth of the Big Bang theory. But there’s also a cosmic x-ray background radiation (CXBR) that in the Big Bang universe can only come from black holes: No other object can concentrate the weak gravitational force enough to produce the quantity of x-rays observed. The problem has been that there aren’t enough black holes to account for the observed quantity.
Now the Spitzer infrared telescope has found a lot of hot dust clouds, and the Big Bang astronomers are seizing on the discovery as proof that many black holes are hiding their optical light behind the dust. Under the astronomers’ theoretical assumptions concerning redshift (the stretching of light toward red on the spectrum), they believe they know the distance to the hot dust clouds. So it’s a simple calculation to determine the energy output required to make the dust appear as hot as Spitzer sees it: Voilà—all the black holes astronomers need (if not more).
The trouble is that these black-hole wanna-be’s are identified as quasars. In the image [see article in link] above, blue and green spots represent Spitzer’s observations at two infrared wavelengths, red spots represent radio observations, and the yellow spot represents an object radiating in both infrared and radio—the signature of a quasar. But quasars are observationally and statistically linked to relatively nearby galaxies. This means that astronomers have been deceived by the quasars’ redshifts. They have assumed that redshift is an indicator of distance, despite the admonition from a growing number of critics that the quasars’ redshifts are largely intrinsic to the objects themselves. If the quasars are not at the farthest reaches of the universe, their energy output is much less than the math indicates, so much less that they can’t be black holes. And the Big Bang again can’t account for the CXBR.”
http://www.thunderbolts.info/t.....nearby.htm
Read more on alternate theories at : http://www.thunderbolts.info
96. travis - April 7th, 2008 at 12:31 am
late O’ day, that wikipedia link is great. it was exactly what i was talking about
97. travis - April 7th, 2008 at 12:36 am
i forgot to write this in. the bible code also fortells destruction in 2012. im not quite sure how much faith i put into the bible code though. what they do is run a series of matrixes on bible pages, or the torah. supposedly, there is a matrix for every event in history (this is history channel information). the bible code says comet, doomsday, 2012.
98. adrian - April 7th, 2008 at 1:02 am
about the idea of doomsday in 2012, i don’t know if it’s possibly true… i’m not familiar with the idea, but i do know that Mayan calendar is accurate… also, i read something about Christ’s second coming being Oct. 21, 2100, sometime around 9:00 AM…
99. kazorek - April 7th, 2008 at 1:35 am
Why is it “queerer” for there to have been a civilization advanced in engineering than aliens having built those things? The former of those two is easily more conceivable.
“but the creation of the universe is something too big to happen so simply.” oh really? i guess you learn something new everyday. sarcasm aside, the big bang is not a “simple” theory by any means.
And Math and Science are not creations, whether or not we recorded and shared them they would still exist. A teacher of mine used to say “don’t let notation get you down,” - math is when you drop your pen and it bounces and rolls on the floor, the vectors, XYZs, etc. that predict and describe what your pen did are just notation. Notation, mind you, that have virtually never been wrong.
100. kazorek - April 7th, 2008 at 1:47 am
And about number nine. We’ve already produced simple proteins out of non-living elements. How exactly it happened on earth is still a mystery, but now we know life can be produced with non-living, naturally occurring compounds.
101. babygirl2882 - April 7th, 2008 at 1:47 am
Sill question, why are planets, stars… named Gliese 581 d and HD 189733 b? Why can’t we just name them Bob and Frank?
8. MichyMoonshine - I used to think something similar when I was little…I used to think that everyone else was a robot and I was the only “real” person.
I was weird too.
102. Adam - April 7th, 2008 at 2:24 am
*sigh*
How many times does this have to be debunked? Once again, for those who have problems paying attention:
The solar system _never_ passes through the center of the galaxy. In fact, we’re orbiting the center of the galaxy at the distance of roughly 28 thousand lightyears in much the same fashion that the Moon orbits Earth. We never pass through it, never get even remotely near it and even if we were to travel from our current position at the speed of light, we would not reach the center of the galaxy for 28 thousand years.
Please, it’s not that difficult.
Honestly, I don’t know what happened to ListVerse, but I’m officially deleting my bookmark for this website because it’s lost any connection to reality and is now filled mostly with new age nonsense.
Good bye.
103. hallowedbethyname - April 7th, 2008 at 2:37 am
like you’ve said the mind is the greatest mystery of all..
i think if we figure out how our minds work, there is a possibilty that we can explain how these mysteries came to be..
104. Mark - April 7th, 2008 at 3:02 am
1# we may find out soon with the LHC in europe. we may also discover extra dimensions with it…creepy.
‘lets make mini black holes…and see what happens’
105. jasontimmer - April 7th, 2008 at 3:02 am
Adam- as someone explained earlier, this might be referring to the solar system becoming parallel to the Milky Way, though I don’t really know if that would cause some kind of cataclysmic destruction of mankind.
106. jfrater - April 7th, 2008 at 3:11 am
Mark: your comment was officially the 50,000th comment on the site!!
107. Jono - April 7th, 2008 at 3:30 am
kazorek:
I hate to fight for the other camp, but we’re still a long way away from those proteins making living organisms. That’s another approach to artificial intelligence. Making an organism from scratch. Considering the proteins that have been synthesized are less complex than even your guanine, cytosine, thymine and uracil, we’re a long way off making a full DNA strand, as well as a cell that will be able to replicate itself using the DNA it contains.
It is possible that this happened naturally, but it’s highly complex and needs to be studied more to find out for sure if it’s possible.
108. Ghidoran - April 7th, 2008 at 4:34 am
75. Anderi: As I said, the markings were on flat ground, not discernible from the sky. How could it draw water? And don’t tell me the ground was higher back then. Otherwise, the lines would be different. And I’m not sure how much watet they could draw.
97. travis: They disproved the Bible Code. It’s a bunch of nonsense. There’s something similar in Moby Dick that predicts an assasination.
102. Adam: The center doesn’t have to be the core of the galaxy, just the core on 1 or 2 planes, like on X and Y, and not on Z. It’s impossible that we’ll go through the center because there is some anomaly there, like a black hole or quasar or pulsar or red giant or something.
109. aura2 - April 7th, 2008 at 4:42 am
Numbers 9, 8, 4,and 1 - and how they relate to each other - are the items of the great Ayreon rockopera’s. Whether you call it sf, fantasy or “keys of evolution”, it’s interesting stuff; very nice list! And if you like good rock music, check out Ayreon…
110. Iain - April 7th, 2008 at 4:43 am
I’m sorry - was this list written by a highly impressionable 12 year old? There are a few genuine ‘unkowns’ mixed in with lashings of babble. What’s sad and a little scary is the number of people saying “Great List!” - the guff about megaliths is especially cretinous.
111. Iain - April 7th, 2008 at 4:46 am
Jeez - you get so steamed, you end up turning an ‘unknown’ into some weird thing called an ‘unkown’.
112. SonOfMyFather - April 7th, 2008 at 4:46 am
That 2012 thing scares me so bad. I’ve always hoped it would just be like the whole 2000 or June 6, 2006 thing. I guess we will just have to wait and see. Plus thats when I graduate!
113. Ghidoran - April 7th, 2008 at 4:47 am
Yes, the list was written by a highly impressionable 12 year old (sort of).
114. Tonny SS - April 7th, 2008 at 5:13 am
Do you people still scare about 2012 not read any of the comments?
It’s fake, it’s debunked, it’s Mayan equivalent of the turn of the millenia, none of the Armageddon stuff was implied by them.
115. Amanda - April 7th, 2008 at 5:22 am
8. MichyMoonshine: I thought that too. Except that I was a doll and some HUGE kid was controlling everything I did… So, you are not the only strange one.
116. Iain - April 7th, 2008 at 5:27 am
112 - SonofMyFather
If that nonsense is scaring you so badly, I’m sure the very notion of you graduating is an entirely moot point (by the way - kindergarten or grade school?).
117. jasontimmer - April 7th, 2008 at 5:57 am
I read somewhere, a while back, about the creation of life thing. Apparently a scientist some time ago took a few gases that existed in the infancy of the Earth, oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, etc… and passed some electrical current through it (think lightning) and out of this primordial soup created amino acids. However, later calculation showed that for these amino acids to evolve into life as it’s known today would take somewhere in the vicinity of 15 billion years or so, roughly the age of the Universe itself, which suggests that the origin of life on Earth was extraterrestrial.
118. romerozombie - April 7th, 2008 at 6:03 am
There’s a prediction that in 2012, the US will be struck by some kind of natural disaster, bigger in size and more destructive than the flooding of New Orleans. Many countries from around the world will send aid, including China. China’s motives aren’t concerned with help, but domination. Somehow, China will takeover the US and became the world’s greatest suuperpower.
119. everlast - April 7th, 2008 at 6:05 am
I know what I’m doing the three days until 12/21/2012…
oiling my guns and stocking the ammo
120. romerozombie - April 7th, 2008 at 6:10 am
Another 2012 theory is that there will be a new spiritual/psychic awakening at the time… like we’ll all get super powers or something, like in Heroes. Sweet.
everlast: you’re not kidding are you?!
121. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 6:30 am
romerozombie:that’d be awesome, I want to be able to travel through time, then I’d get ListVerse started quicker
122. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 6:32 am
everlast: I’ll be throwing a party the whole day ‘cus I know it’s not gonna happen. And if it does, I already have ten guys in the back oiling my guns and stocking my ammo…
123. everlast - April 7th, 2008 at 6:45 am
actually December 21st 2012 is a friday, so ill probably be at the bar
124. jfrater - April 7th, 2008 at 6:49 am
Csimmons: hahaha - taken out of context, your last comment is rather lewd
125. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 6:56 am
jfrater: Very mature
126. Jon - April 7th, 2008 at 7:05 am
Csimmons: Apparantly creationists have managed to work out the DATE on which the world was created…October 23rd. So I was planning a week long party (well, six days, then I’ll rest). If you can come to my beginning of the world bash can I come to your apocalypse?
127. skeev - April 7th, 2008 at 7:16 am
One of the explanations for the Haitian zombies I’ve seen is that they aren’t zombies at all. They had a documentary on Discovery I believe that showed homeless people taking the role of a recently deceased person.
One of the incidents I remember the most was a young man had died in an accident and a homeless man who looked slightly similer started hanging around the nieghborhood acting like he was in a daze or like a zombie. When the family saw him they began feeding him and letting him stay around thier house. It didn’t matter to them that he didn’t look exactly like thier son or that the idea of him returning from the dead was ridiculous, they were blinded by grief.
They had several interviews with locals that said this a very common occurance and that in many respects it was the only way the homeless there can get any help.
128. skeev - April 7th, 2008 at 7:23 am
The last year on my Windows is 2099. Apparently Microsoft is more optimistic than Nokia.
129. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 7:24 am
Jon: Hells yes, where do you live LOL!
130. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 7:26 am
Jon: Also, will there be punch? I plan to spike any if I go , yet again LOL!
131. Bob - April 7th, 2008 at 7:29 am
Horrible amount of ignorance of grammar and basic metaphysics in this list. Sorry.
132. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 7:31 am
skeev: My nokia ends on 2050, my PC says 2080, and my Labtop says 2099, weird.
133. Jon - April 7th, 2008 at 7:39 am
Csimmons: Better save the punch for yours, I don’t want any nonsense- although maybe on the sixth day, when God created Jonestown.
Be in London on the 23rd for the prelapsarian party. On the first day we celebrate the sun (in London, in October. Hmmm…)
Punch will be served on the third day, when God created fruit. And if all this blasphemy doesn’t hurry about the end of the world then I don’t know what will.
Everyone on Listverse is invited, except anyone who makes a lame joke like ‘and God said, ‘Let there be Bud Light” huh huh.
134. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 7:54 am
Jon: Oh, London, Shit, can’t come, sorry!
My party is gonna be one theme, laugh at those guys in their shelters while we get wasted off the cherry punch that tastes a bit like malt liquor…, In kentucky and may not happen ‘cus i still can’t get alcohol then.
135. chris - April 7th, 2008 at 8:00 am
This list is horrible. I thoroughly enjoyed the other mystery lists, but this one is just bad. Poorly written, lame subject matter.
136. Jon - April 7th, 2008 at 8:01 am
Csimmons: How about you spend the week beforehand busting into all the shelters and stealing their tin-openers? Or does everyone in Kentucky keep their food in buckets…
137. pero - April 7th, 2008 at 8:05 am
Center of Galaxy… is somebody stupid or lying. The center of our galaxy has a massive super black hole and near center there are so many stars so matter is so dense. So if we had passed through center how the f…. we ended on the other side…It is just nonsense. I agree with “chestah” our planets will line up to direction to center of our galaxy. We wont be any near the center…Go to google sky and check where is our solar system. It looks it will fall out of our galaxy.. So before you write sh…t please check the info..
138. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 8:09 am
Jon: Oh, how nice, I don’t only eat KFC, just a lot of it, and I wouldn’t do that, I might if i get extremely hammered though…
139. Jon - April 7th, 2008 at 8:12 am
Csimmons: Sorry, cheap shot I know! Xx
140. QDV - April 7th, 2008 at 8:34 am
Nazca Lines: There’s some good reading on this in Joe Nickell’s “Ambrose Bierce Is Missing.” Hint: You can make your own. Bonus: This book has a chapter on something some folks (not myself) consider to be an “unsolved mystery,” the Shroud of Turin.
141. Randall - April 7th, 2008 at 8:34 am
pero is correct… the solar system most definitely is NOT due to enter the middle of the galaxy, now or at any conceivable time in the future.
Such a thing would be a disaster for our world and all the life on it, let alone the rest of the solar system. Radiation at or near the center is intense, and there is the aforementioned massive black hole–which would not necessarily be a danger unless we got too close–but if you’re going “right through” the center—yeah, that’s very, very bad.
A correction is in order there.
142. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 8:43 am
Jon:It’s alright man, BTW, I know what the sun looks like, do you?
143. Randall - April 7th, 2008 at 8:48 am
Not to be too nitpicky, but the Colossus of Rhodes was most definitely not a megalithic structure–it was made of bronze, and was built in historical times (i.e., when the ancient Greeks had writing–in fact, it was built *after* the classical period of ancient Athens).
*Technically,* the pyramids aren’t really considered megaliths either–whether they’re Egyptian or Mesoamerican. Although in general they fit the definition (a structure made of massive rocks) in fact, “megalithic” in archeological terms usually refers to *pre-historic* structures using relatively untooled, massive rocks. Stonehenge fits this bill, as does Carnac and the countless other “stone rings” and stone tombs of Western Europe, Britain and Ireland…. as well as some sites in the Mediterranean.
The pyramids, however, are of a degree of sophistication that usually removes them from the category of “megalithic.”
144. facekickin - April 7th, 2008 at 9:18 am
haha.christ’s second coming is Oct. 21, 2100, sometime around 9:00 AM? it might be a little later the starbuck’s is busy that morning.. “geez. come on people. i have a rapture to get to.”
145. Joss - April 7th, 2008 at 10:09 am
Interesting list. Kind of difficult to read, though.
146. Jaz013 - April 7th, 2008 at 10:14 am
December 22, 2012 is just the end of the bigger mayan calendar cicle nothing to be scared of. Think of it as the passing form 1999 to 2000, or from 9,999 to 10,000, for a bigger scale.
Also, Mayans didn’t believed in catastrophic armagedon-like events, but in changes in the way the people live (and as far as I know, for the better).
147. travis - April 7th, 2008 at 10:31 am
Randall
read my earlier post 89 about moving through the “center” of the galaxy. imagine the galaxy as a flat plane. the solar system wobbles up and down through that plane. it doesnt pass through the center that often. the solar system stays on the outside arms of the galaxy, but in relation to the plane parrallel to the center, we will move through it (this is what i have heard. it was a serious show that talked about how we move through the center)
148. Shabab - April 7th, 2008 at 10:39 am
The nazca lines have been PROVEN to be landing strips. Why would a hovering spacecraft need a landing strip u ask? Because they dint come in hovering space crafts, they came in DC-8s bearing souls from Xenu’s overpopulated planet. This is a FACT.
(sorry, tis been a long time since a Cruisetology reference on LV)
149. Shabab - April 7th, 2008 at 11:00 am
Ghidoran: Are u actually from Bangladesh? Are u a native or were u just born here?
______
“Csimmons: I already have ten guys in the back oiling my guns and stocking my ammo…”
“jfrater: Csimmons: hahaha - taken out of context, your last comment is rather lewd”
HAHAHAHAHA XD
150. Crimanon - April 7th, 2008 at 11:13 am
I think the world that seems to be escaping everyone one Is Conjunction: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C.....rology%29. I hate quoting The Evil Wiki, but I’n in a hurry and If it’s to be trusted December 20, 2012 isn’t even on there for the event in question.
151. Crimanon - April 7th, 2008 at 11:15 am
Everlast: why not both? we’ll apparently be dead anyway. Live it up!
152. Dane - April 7th, 2008 at 12:05 pm
I don’t like that #1 presupposes that the universe was created or has some beginning and ending points. If it is thought to be infinite in space (or at least without bound), why not in time?
To think that the universe was created assumes that there was some time when the universe did not exist. Since something cannot come from nothing, this makes no sense.
153. Me, Myself and I - April 7th, 2008 at 12:28 pm
I dont know if the world is really gonna end in 2012, but it does seem quite likely, many ancient civilisations say so, and the Bible, in the book of Revelations (the final book) also talks about the end of the world. Saying that the sun will heat up and scorch people, and then the world will be plunged into darkness. Well, arent the scientists telling us that the sun could burn out any minute? And it is getting hotter, with Global arming…. Why does life have to be coincidence or us evolving from a puddle of goo? I have to admit that sometimes, I think that life might be just a dream, or my own imagination. But if we dont have faith, any faith really, hat do we have?
154. Me, Myself and I - April 7th, 2008 at 12:31 pm
In Revelation 16:12, it is prophesied that the Euphrates will dry up in preparation for the Battle of Armageddon: “And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river Euphrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the way of the kings of the east might be prepared.” (Wikipedia)
155. Ozhan - April 7th, 2008 at 12:31 pm
Intuition… fake! Those people just want attention
:P
Megalithic structures
C’omen, not enough techonolghy?! I even watched a documantary where researchers build their own with ancient ways!
156. Me, Myself and I - April 7th, 2008 at 12:40 pm
Ozhan: dont you ever get the feeling that someone is watching you? well they probably are.
Like I know if someone has been in my room while I have been out, even if they leave the door shut (which I always do)lol.
I think there are alot of things which need explaining, but why not just live life to the full and have as much fun as you can (within reason), you only live once! You shouldnt worry about things like where the world came from, you should probably think about these things but life would be very boring if everyone went around worrying about things like the end of the world, though it is fun to theorise. We spent an entire English lesson theorising about the end of the world, when we were meant to be looking at “A Woman Of No Importance” by Ocsar Wilde.
157. Crimanon - April 7th, 2008 at 12:40 pm
Dane: A fan of the Solid State theory?
Me, myself and I: No Scientist are saying that the sun is getting hotter, in fact the exact opposite, the sun is cooling and expanding. It will not dry our oceans, they will be gone long before the sun affects them. Global warming is part of nature, we just are just helping the cycle along at an incredible rate. “We are destroying our Atmosphere” is a flawed concept. Too many variables involved.
158. Me, Myself and I - April 7th, 2008 at 1:40 pm
Crimanon: I’m not saying that the sun is heating up, the book of Revelations is the most contraversial book in the Bible. It is very difficult to decipher what is being said. It could be referring to global warming, but in a round-about way, because, in those days, when the Bible was written, how did they know what we would call it? I do agree the Global Warming is probably just a part of nature, however, we should not be speeding it up, we are the reason that global warming is such a big issue now. If global warming isnt stopped, in 50 years, the town I live in could be a seaside town, I live nearly 30 miles from the coast! This is the result of global warming.
We also should try to help the environment for other reasons, think of all the animals that would die, and are dying every day from deforestation and rising sea levels. Millions of people will die or lose their homes if we keep up this abusive use of our planet’s reaources.
We might be able to buy practically anything we want, with the money, but we cannot but another planet! No matter how much money we have, so we have to look after the one we have, cos even if you dont believe that global warming could be what the Bible is referring to, we still need to stop destroying our home! The Planet!
159. jrjb - April 7th, 2008 at 3:58 pm
good reading. VOOODOOOOOO
160. NeoLudd - April 7th, 2008 at 4:12 pm
clervius narcisse needs brains
161. Ghidoran - April 7th, 2008 at 4:33 pm
jrjb - No, it’s spelled Vodou.
162. otay - April 7th, 2008 at 4:36 pm
Just maybe…… it was us, our future selves, that went back in time and seeded the earth so that we could exist. Would that make us gods?
163. SonOfMyFather - April 7th, 2008 at 4:48 pm
116 - Iain
High School, Sometimes I think to much into things and I fear the unknown. Ok? You don’t have to be so condescending.
164. Ashyja - April 7th, 2008 at 5:18 pm
A very good explanation about what could and what will happen on 21st dec 2012: http://www.viewzone.com/endtime.html
165. Crimanon - April 7th, 2008 at 5:39 pm
Ashyja: Considering gravity being every where And inescapable. How would Intersecting the galactic plane affect us? On a Scale as big as the galaxy, how can we even begin to estimate the force of gravity. Regardless of our intersection with the Milky Way, how are we any closer To the galactic core? As elegant as your essay, is It is still no more than an elementary “This is how gravity works” 2D image.
http://images.google.com/imgre.....s%26sa%3DN … sorry about that.
166. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 6:11 pm
I might throw a party on December 21st, 2012, All are invited unless we are screwed over and it’s actually the day before. That’d suck even though it’s not gonna happen.
167. DANTE - April 7th, 2008 at 6:13 pm
JFRATER, EUROPA IS ONE OF JUPITER’S MOONS NOT SATURN!!!!!!!!
168. Ashyja - April 7th, 2008 at 6:13 pm
Crimanon: The article isn’t about gravity itself, but rather what could happen to the sun when we cross the line where more gravity effects the sun than usual. At least, that’s how I understood it. I’m a complete idiot in astrophysics, but I have to admit that this article sounds quite believable. More so than a lot of doomsday prophesies that don’t go into detail. And I don’t understand this article as any try to cause panic, but rather shed some light on what some people seem to fear. At least, it does a bit more than your ranting I could read in this ‘thread’. Sorry about that.
Concerning ‘the day’: I’ll do what I always do when I read things like that. I read some infos, think a bit, wait and see and usually nothing big happens.
169. Csimmons - April 7th, 2008 at 6:21 pm
Dante: And you knew that how? I smell space geek,
170. DANTE - April 7th, 2008 at 6:29 pm
Csimmons: No I’m not, actually I just looked at comment #28 where 80s states that Europa is in fact a moon of Jupiter, and not Saturn as jfrater originally thought. I looked it up on wikipedia and other websites to verify and 80s was correct. Although he also states that Neptune’s moon Tritan was a typo of Saturn’s moon Titan, but I looked that up as well and Neptune does in fact have a moon dubbed Tritan and was not a typo of Saturn’s moon Titan which also exists…
Yeah I guess I’m kind of a space geek. Lol.
171. Monteze - April 7th, 2008 at 7:08 pm
it is pretty mind blowing just how smart the ancient civilizations of SA were. they came up with the concept of zero before the western world did, they might have even been more advanced today if they had only built up immunitys to small pox
172. diz - April 7th, 2008 at 7:28 pm
examination.
Funny thing, I’ve written 3 comments, and none show up when I go to “comments”. Maybe we can’t see our own?
173. Anderi - April 7th, 2008 at 8:24 pm
Ghidoran: You misread what I said.
The nazca landing strips were used in CEREMONIAL marches to draw water. As in magic and spiritual stuff.
They believed that the water came from the hills and mountains and therefore their godly emperors were the only ones divine enough and powerful enough (with the help of the priests) to draw the water down.
Not grooves for the water to run through. Times of drought and famine bring about desperate measures.
174. Cedestra - April 7th, 2008 at 10:01 pm
@161. Ghidoran - April 7th, 2008 at 4:33 pm
jrjb - No, it’s spelled Vodou.
Perhaps Francocized (did I just make a new word?), but in English, at least American, we call it voodoo or hoodoo.
Anyone watch The Universe on the History Channel? One episode was about the Big Bang theory. There was another theory that was originally accepted in the 20th century. It stated that the universe goes on forever and ever- it never began, it just was. Everything is constant and unmoving. Once they found out those radio waves, that theory was smashed, though. I think that’s what it was- I can only retain so much detail from such an intense subject.
Also, ponder this: the Big Bang created our universe, but could there have been Big Bangs before it? One Big Bang, expansion, contraction, Big Bang, expansion, contraction, ad nauseum. They say our universe is 13.7 billion years old- oddly sounding, I think that’s a pretty short amount of time. Maybe that one is more on the mark.
175. jasontimmer - April 8th, 2008 at 2:12 am
Me, Myself- #153: No, the scientists aren’t telling us the sun could burn out at any minute. On the contrary, the scientists are telling us the sun is about halfway through it’s life. There’s still some debate on how long that is, but estimates range from 3 to 7 billion years. Either way,we’ve got some time yet.
176. jasontimmer - April 8th, 2008 at 2:15 am
Cedestra- what’s interesting to consider is that through each cycle of bang, expansion, and contraction, the Universe goes through an inevitable course of events, and repeats it exactly on each cycle, which means that we’ve lived this life over, and over, and over. Man I’m getting tired of making this post.
177. jasontimmer - April 8th, 2008 at 2:15 am
I should note that it’s just a theory.
178. 80s - April 8th, 2008 at 2:24 am
Dante, I did know Neptune had a moon called Triton, I just thought perhaps the list creater had gotten Triton and Titan mixed up, so I turned on my cruise-control for cool and put it in caps
Although Triton is geologically active, and does have methane in it’s atmosphere (hydrocarbons are important!) I’m pretty sure it’s not a viable moon for life due it’s distance from the sun, extremely thin atmosphere and temperatures low enough for liquid nitrogen cryovolcanoes to form. I’ve never seen it mentioned anywhere that it could harbour life.
179. Ghidoran - April 8th, 2008 at 4:20 am
Cedestra: Check out wikipedia. Maybe it’s a different voodoo?
180. Cazz - April 8th, 2008 at 5:11 am
I thought the zombies in Haiti had recently been attributed to a slow acting bacteria that thrived in the corn they harvested?
After long periods of exposure it affected the brain in such a way that it slowed the heart-rate and brain activity so local witch doctors belived them to be dead, only to find them wandering through the villages days later…. This is just what I can recall from an old copy of New Scientist!
181. Randall - April 8th, 2008 at 5:44 am
Travis #147:
I’m in perfect understanding of the nature of the galaxy, Travis… astronomy is one of my fields.
You, on the other hand, are spouting stuff from “bible code” and Nostradamus. Sorry, but zero credibility there, on both counts.
The solar system does move and “oscillate” a bit through the spiral arms of our galaxy. But NEVER does it cross into the CENTER of the galaxy. I gather what you’re trying to say is that the solar system at some point will pass through the *plane* that bisects the center–the “galactic plane” …and this is probably what has you confused. We’re still way out on the spiral arms, closer to the “edge” of the Milky Way than to the center. And well for us–because the center of the Milky Way would be deadly to us. BUT, in passing through the galactic plane, we may encounter more interstellar dust and cosmic rays. It’s a slightly busier region, but catastrophic for us? No. Space is still vast and largely empty. We’re just talking about a *possibly* higher percentage or rays and dust slamming into the solar system… but you see, our solar system is protected by the magnetic field of the sun, which forms a bubble around the entire system. Some alarmists were saying that the increased amounts of radiation and dust could overwhelm the sun’s field and push the “bow shock” –i.e., the wave of gas, dust and radiation that strikes the boundary between our sun’s influence and interstellar space (called the Heliopause) back into the solar system itself—but this isn’t necessarily going to happen.
At any rate, I don’t care how “serious” you perceived the show to be, that you saw this on–you misunderstood to some extent, and also it sounds like it wasn’t as “serious” as you thought, and was on a par with the Nostradamus nonsense that we also see all over television—more “catastrophe-related, end-of-the-world crap.”
182. Randall - April 8th, 2008 at 5:53 am
80s, others:
Okay… it does sound to me like the list writer got mixed up. Triton is the giant moon of Neptune (it’s also postulated that eventually, in a few million years, Triton will collide with Neptune due to the high eccentricity of its orbit) and is NOT a candidate for life—while it’s cold in the neighborhoods of Jupiter and Saturn, it is EXTREMELY cold out Neptune’s way, and there is no theory that supports any notion of Triton being capable of supporting life.
TITAN, however–the giant moon of Saturn, is possibly another story. Though again, the cold probably negates it. But the atmosphere and conditions at Titan are very similar to those of the early earth—so the slim possibility is there.
EUROPA is a far better bet–one of the four large moons of Jupiter, what makes Europa a viable option is the evidence for a liquid ocean underneath its mantle of ice. The theory is that tidal forces and other possible effects caused by the powerful gravitational/magnetic field of Jupiter cause enough pushing and pulling within Europa to heat the planet enough for it’s vast store of water to be liquid—and as I say, there’s evidence for this.
ENCALEDUS, a smaller moon of Saturn, is very similar to Europa, and here the evidence is even greater for a liquid ocean under the surface of ice.
183. Shadow - April 8th, 2008 at 6:08 am
Ghidoran - Actually, there’s two sides to this ‘Voodoo’ thing. First though, it’s proper name is “Santaria”. Second, the two sides are “Voudou”, where a Voudoun is the head, and “Houdou”, where a Houdoun is the leader. Houdoun is the sect that is considered to be evil, and the one which is notorious for creating these ‘zombies’.
Randall - Thank you for the clarification. That part had me a bit confused as I remembered reading that this was supposed to signal the beginning of that new ager “Age of Aquarius” era or something. However, nowhere had I personally read that we were supposed to pass through the galactic core; we were only to cross the plane of elliptic or some such thing. As for what that portends; in about four years we’ll all find out, won’t we.
184. Shadow - April 8th, 2008 at 6:09 am
Pardon me, I hit the “n” at the end of “Houdoun” in the last sentence of the first paragraph of my earlier post by mistake.
185. kiwiboi - April 8th, 2008 at 6:13 am
“Triton will collide with Neptune due to the high eccentricity of its orbit) and is NOT a candid