Yet Another 10 Unsolved Mysteries
Published on February 13, 2008 - 169 Comments
Following the great popularity of our earlier lists on unsolved mysteries, we are presenting you with a third. These are all mysteries that have continued to evade a conclusive explanation. If you think you know the answer, be sure to tell us in the comments! If you wish to see the previous two lists (which you should do before you complain about a mystery not being included on this list), they are:
Top 10 Unsolved Mysteries
Another 10 Unsolved Mysteries
10. The Vile Vortices

The Vile Vortices twelve are areas distributed more or less evenly around the globe that are alleged to have the same qualities as claimed for the Bermuda Triangle. Five are located on a latitude near the Tropic of Capricorn; Five on a latitude near the Tropic of Cancer; and one each at either of the Poles. They form the vertices of an icosahedron. As well as the Bermuda triangle, the Devil’s Triangle (or Devil’s Sea) is one of the twelve areas. The Devil’s Triangle is claimed to be the cause of the disappearance of Amelia Earhart, noted American aviation pioneer, author and women’s rights advocate who disappeared over the central Pacific Ocean near Howland Island during an attempt to make a circumnavigational flight of the globe in 1937. In the image above the vortices are marked out in a different color.
9. Frederick Valentich’s Disappearance

The Frederick Valentich Disappearance is an event that occurred on October 21, 1978, in which 20-year-old Frederick Valentich disappeared in unexplained circumstances while piloting a Cessna 182L light aircraft over the Bass Strait to King Island, Australia. Prior to his disappearance, Valentich reported via radio that he had encountered an unidentified craft which was moving at the same speed of his plane, and which hovered over him. No trace of Valentich or his aircraft was ever found. Shortly before Valentich’s last reported contact, plumber Roy Manifold set up a time lapse camera and tripod on the shoreline in order to photograph the sun setting over the water. When his pictures were developed they appeared to show a fast moving object exiting the water. Manifold gave the time that the pictures were taken as being approximately 6:47 pm (18:47 hrs), or 20 minutes before Valentich reported having difficulties. Moments before a strange noise terminated Valentich’s communications, he said: “My intentions are - ah - to go to King Island - ah - Melbourne. That strange aircraft is hovering on top of me again (open microphone for two seconds). It is hovering and it’s not an aircraft.”
For more information and transcripts of the final communications with ground control, read the article on Frederich Valentich on Gnokr.
8. Oak Island Money Pit

The Oak Island Money Pit is the site of the world’s longest running hunt for lost treasure. For hundreds of years, treasure hunters have ventured to Nova Scotia and tried to recover the treasure which is protected by a series of ingenious traps. Strange man made artifacts have been recovered from the pit over the years, but to this day, the treasure still remains buried. Pirates, the Knights Templar or Francis Bacon - no one is sure exactly who created this mysterious Money Pit or why. There has been wide-ranging speculation as to who originally dug the pit and what it might contain. Oak platforms were discovered every 10 feet. There were pick scrapes on the walls on the money pit and the dirt was noticeably loose and not as hard packed. The flood tunnel at 90 feet has been identified and known to be lined with flat stones. Some have speculated that the Oak Island pit was dug to hold treasure much more exotic than gold or silver. In his 1953 book, The Oak Island Enigma: A History and Inquiry Into the Origin of the Money Pit, Penn Leary claimed that English philosopher Francis Bacon used the pit to hide documents proving him to be the author of William Shakespeare’s plays. In the image above we see the money pit as it appears today.
7. Noah’s Ark - found?

The Ararat anomaly is an object appearing on photographs of the snowfields near the summit of Mount Ararat, Turkey, and advanced by some believers in Biblical literalism as the remains of Noah’s Ark. The anomaly is located on the northwest corner of the Western Plateau of Mount Ararat at about 15,500 ft. It was first filmed during a U.S. Air Force aerial reconnaissance mission in 1949 — the Ararat massif sits on the former Turkish/Soviet border, and was thus an area of military interest — and was accordingly given a classification of “secret” as were subsequent photographs taken in 1956, 1973, 1976, 1990 and 1992, by aircraft and satellites. Six frames from the 1949 footage were released under the Freedom of Information Act. A joint research project was later established between Insight Magazine and Space Imaging (now GeoEye), using the IKONOS satellite. IKONOS, on its maiden voyage, captured the anomaly on August 5 and September 13, 2000. The Mount Ararat area also has been imaged by France’s SPOT satellite in September 1989, Landsat in the 1970s and NASA’s Space shuttle in 1994.
6. The Fire of Jeannie Saffin

There are many famous cases of people who seem to have spontaneously caught fire (Spontaneous Human Combustion) but there is a lesser known case of a woman who suffered this fate in front of witnesses. At approximately 4 p.m. on Wednesday, September 15, 1982, Jeannie Saffin aged 61, burst into flames while sitting on a wooden Windsor chair in the kitchen of her home in Edmonton, London, England. Her father, eighty-two-year-old Jack Saffin, was seated at a nearby table and said he saw a flash of light out of the corner of his eye and turned to Jeannie to ask if she had seen it. He was astonished to find that she was enveloped in flames, mainly around her face and hands. Mr. Saffin said Jeannie did not cry out or move, but merely sat there with her hands in her lap. Her father pulled her over to the sink, badly burning his own hands, and started trying to douse the flames with water. Jeannie went in to a coma and died 8 days later. The policeman who conducted the investigation into possible murder reported to the coroner’s court that no cause for Jeannie’s combustion could be found. There was no charring or signs of burning anywhere in the room except on Jeannie’s body. The image above is from another case of Spontaneous Human Combustion as none could be found of Jeannie Saffin.
5. Red Rain in Kerala

From 25 July to 23 September 2001, red rain sporadically fell on the southern Indian state of Kerala. Heavy downpours occurred in which the rain was colored red, staining clothes with an appearance similar to that of blood. Yellow, green, and black rain was also reported. According to locals, the first coloured rain was preceded by a loud thunderclap and flash of light, and followed by groves of trees shedding shrivelled grey “burnt” leaves. Shrivelled leaves and the disappearance and sudden formation of wells were also reported around the same time in the area. A study commissioned by the Government of India found that the rains had been colored by airborne spores from a locally prolific terrestrial alga. Then in early 2006, the colored rains of Kerala suddenly rose to worldwide attention after media reports of a conjecture that the colored particles were extraterrestrial cells. The origin of the rain is still unknown today, despite worldwide efforts to discover the cause and true nature of the rain.
4. The Mysterious Kaspar Hauser

On May 26, 1828 a teenage boy appeared in the streets of Nuremberg, Germany. He carried a letter with him which was addressed to a captain of 6th cavalry regiment. The anonymous author said that the boy was given into his custody, as an infant, on the 7th October 1812, and that he had never let him “take a single step out of my house”. Now the boy would like to be a cavalryman, thus the captain should take him in or hang him. Hauser claimed that he had, for as long as he could think back, spent his life always totally alone in a darkened 2×1×1.5 metre cell (little more than the size of a one-person bed in area) with only a straw bed to sleep on and a horse carved out of wood for a toy. Hauser claimed that the first human being he ever had had contact with had been a mysterious man who had visited him not long before his release, always taking great care not to reveal his face to him. According to contemporary rumors - probably current as early as 1829 - Kaspar Hauser was the hereditary prince of Baden that was born on September 29, 1812 and had died within a month. It was claimed that this prince had been switched with a dying baby, and had indeed appeared 16 years later as “Kaspar Hauser” in Nuremberg. Hauser died after receiving a stab wound to the chest which was possible self-inflicted. He claimed he had been stabbed by the man who had kept him as an infant.
In 2002, the University of Münster analyzed hair and body cells from locks of hair and items of clothing that were alleged to belong to Kaspar Hauser. The DNA samples were compared to a DNA segment of Astrid von Medinger, a descendant in the female line of Stéphanie de Beauharnais, who would have been Kaspar Hauser’s mother if indeed he had been the hereditary prince of Baden. The sequences were not identical but the deviation observed is not large enough to exclude a relationship, as it could be caused by a mutation.
3. The Man in the Iron Mask

The Man in the Iron Mask (died November 1703) was a prisoner who was held in a number of jails, including the Bastille and the Chateau d’If, during the reign of Louis XIV of France. The identity of this man has been thoroughly discussed, mainly because no one ever saw his face which was hidden by a mask of black velvet cloth. Later retellings of the story have claimed that it was an iron mask. The first surviving records of the masked prisoner are from 1669, when Louis XIV’s minister sent a prisoner to the care of the governor of the prison of Pignerol. According to Louvois’ letter, the man’s name was Eustache Dauger. Louvois instructed Saint-Mars to prepare a cell with multiple doors which were to prevent anyone from the outside listening in. Dauger was also to be told that if he spoke of anything other than his immediate needs he would be killed. Saint-Mars was to see Dauger only once a day in order to provide food and whatever else he needed. He spent his remaining years in jail, with his true identity being concealed. Upon his death, all of his belongings were destroyed. Theories about his identity made at the time included that he was a Marshal of France; or Richard Cromwell, son of Oliver Cromwell; or Francois de Vendôme, Duc de Beaufort. Later, many people such as Voltaire put forward other theories about the man in the mask.
2. Sailing Stones

The sailing stones are a geological phenomenon found in the Racetrack Playa (a seasonally dry lake located in the northern part of the Panamint Mountains in Death Valley National Park, California, U.S.A.). The stones slowly move across the surface of the playa, leaving a track as they go, without human or animal intervention. They have never been seen or filmed in motion and are not unique to The Racetrack. Similar rock travel patterns have been recorded in several other playas in the region but the number and length of travel grooves on The Racetrack are notable. Racetrack stones only move once every two or three years and most tracks last for just three or four years. Stones with rough bottoms leave straight striated tracks while those with smooth bottoms wander. Stones sometimes turn over, exposing another edge to the ground and leaving a different-sized track in the stone’s wake.
Various and sometimes idiosyncratic possible explanations have been put forward over the years that have ranged from the supernatural to the very complex. Most hypotheses favored by interested geologists posit that strong winds when the mud is wet are at least in part responsible. Some stones weigh as much as a human, which some researchers such as geologist George M. Stanley who published a paper on the topic in 1955 feel is too heavy for the area’s wind to move.
1. The WOW! Signal

The Wow! signal was a strong, narrowband radio signal detected by Dr. Jerry R. Ehman on August 15, 1977 while working on a SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) project at the Big Ear radio telescope of the Ohio State University. The signal bore expected hallmarks of potential non-terrestrial and non-solar system origin. It lasted for 72 seconds, the full duration Big Ear observed it, but has not been detected again. It has been the focus of attention in the mainstream media when talking about SETI results. The Big Ear telescope was fixed and used the rotation of the Earth to scan the sky. At the speed of the earth’s rotation, and given the width of the Big Ear’s observation “window”, the Big Ear could observe any given point for just 72 seconds. An extraterrestrial signal, therefore, would be expected to register for exactly 72 seconds, and the recorded intensity of that signal would show a gradual peaking for the first 36 seconds — until the signal reached the center of Big Ear’s observation “window” — at which time it would show a gradual decrease. Therefore, both the length of the Wow! signal, 72 seconds, and its shape would correspond to an extraterrestrial origin. The region of the sky in which the signal was heard, lies in the constellation Sagittarius, roughly 2.5 degrees south of the fifth-magnitude star Chi-1 Sagittarii.
This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains quotations from Wikipedia.
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1. Csimmons - February 13th, 2008 at 6:58 am
FIRST!
2. Csimmons - February 13th, 2008 at 6:59 am
The sailing stones have always kinda creeped me out.
3. Csimmons - February 13th, 2008 at 7:03 am
Noahs Ark never happened so it can’t be found.
4. Zach - February 13th, 2008 at 7:06 am
#7: Maybe I’m missing something, but have they ever tried to excavate the site or explore it? Or is it too high an altitude to try? I find that fascinating.
The stones are pretty wild, I agree.
5. Csimmons - February 13th, 2008 at 7:11 am
The sailing stones are pretty weird, i think they were moved by wind but im not sure.
6. Zach - February 13th, 2008 at 7:12 am
I guess that’s possible, but like it said, they are so heavy that seems almost impossible. But hey I’m no scientist. I just play one on TV.
7. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 7:15 am
Zach: the reason they haven’t investigated is because it is on the border of two countries that are not all that friendly towards each other.
8. dangorironhide - February 13th, 2008 at 7:16 am
Great list J, really interesting. I’ve read about the money pit somewhere before, but I can’t remember where. Probably wiki. I remember seeing a really good cross-section picture of it as well.
The picture for #6 is really creepy…
I heard something about the man in the iron mask being Louix XIV’s twin brother or something, who was locked up to stop any threat to Louix’s throne…
9. Csimmons - February 13th, 2008 at 7:19 am
#6 really is creepy, i saw something on the discovery channel about human combustion, really scared me.
10. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 7:20 am
dangorironhide: thanks
I think the money pit has been mentioned on this site before - though not as an item on a list.
11. Peri - February 13th, 2008 at 7:25 am
#7: I belive an attempt had been made once, but had to be abandoned due to weather. The Turkish government has since refused any further exploration of the site. Until they change their minds, we’ll never know.
12. MHR - February 13th, 2008 at 7:26 am
Last year i saw a video which solves the mystery of the sailing stones. it’s very simple.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1hoiHvOeGc
13. Ozhan - February 13th, 2008 at 7:28 am
About #8, I think locals use it for tourist income. If wanted, rumors can be answered..
About sailing stones… Duh, just put a camera and record for a year
If recorded rock dont move but other rocks move. So someone must rolling them while nobody looking
I also believe #7 is a hoax!
14. Csimmons - February 13th, 2008 at 7:29 am
I saw a video abut the sailing stones in last year in school, there was some crackpot saying it was aliens moving the rocks. He had a bong in the backround.
15. Mike - February 13th, 2008 at 7:30 am
I don’t know, but that photo of “Noah’s Ark” looks kinda just like a natural rock formation… Its hard to believe no one has went to examine it up close…
16. JwJwBean - February 13th, 2008 at 7:30 am
#9 is the one that gets me. I thought I had read a few other accounts like that too. If he was taken by ET’s why couldn’t Amelia Earhart have suffered the same fate?
17. Ozhan - February 13th, 2008 at 7:31 am
Watching the youtube video MHR gives.
18. Davern - February 13th, 2008 at 7:34 am
I love these mystery lists. number 9 is particularly creepy i think. And the wow signal is very interesting but could use more explanation.
19. erin - February 13th, 2008 at 7:34 am
I live in Nova Scotia. The problem with the pit is, after they dug so far down the entire pit would flood. They think it’s because there was a booby trap that opened a flood tunnel that flows from the Bay of Fundy surrounding the island.
http://www.activemind.com/Myst.....story.html
That’s a good picture of what the pit looks like.
20. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 7:35 am
#12 (MHRs video): If that is definitely the case, why has no one managed to capture footage of the rocks being moved in this way? The clip just shows water moving - if they really wanted to prove their theory they should go at night when it is beyond freezing and film the rocks being moved by the iceflow.
21. JwJwBean - February 13th, 2008 at 7:36 am
MHR; That is a great video. Thanks.
22. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 7:39 am
erin: wow - fascinating site - thanks for the link
23. fishing4monkeys - February 13th, 2008 at 7:40 am
Woah cool list! I love these mystery lists! Keep ‘em commin!
O and I don’t understand #4 (probably because i’m really tired) what is the mystery?
24. JwJwBean - February 13th, 2008 at 7:42 am
I think the mystery is who was he and was he royalty?
25. SocialButterfly - February 13th, 2008 at 7:50 am
I have heard of a few of these that’s new: I heard about the money pit from a friend who moved to my city from Nova Scotia, What were the traps that were set??
I remember seeing a special on TV about “Noah’s Ark” a few years back, if I remember correctly it was on National geographic or Discovery Channel.
SHC has been documented on shows like Unsolved Myseries… very creppy that she was just sitting there with her arms folded. I wonder if she was even alive at that point?
I watched a movie about the man in the iron mask… it had Leonardo Dicaprio in it. In the movie the theory was that it was Louis XIV’s twin. This may be what you were thinking of dangorironhide.
The WOW signal is wild! If only they were able to stop the satellite dish so that they could keep listening, maybe it would have given us a code to build a machine, like in Contact.
26. SocialButterfly - February 13th, 2008 at 7:53 am
BTW Jamie, I love these mystery/ history lists… Thank you for posting another one…
I have also been thinking about the list suggestion that I sent you a while back. Can I send you my full list of Top 10?
27. Mom424 - February 13th, 2008 at 7:53 am
Most of these are pretty cool, #’s 10,9,5 are new to me, but a few I know have been de-bunked…
#7 is a shadow caused by a natural rock formation and snow. I don’t remember where I saw/read it, but they got a better picture from a different satellite….still cool though
#6 is not spontaneous, they found a fire source (think it was a smoke or heater), people aren’t much different than an oil lamp, we render down and burn the same as whale oil the inuit use for light/heat..there is not enough fat in extremities to sustain the reaction, that’s why in almost all cases of SHC feet are leftover
#8 I want to know why anyone bothered to create such a complex hole to bury nothing. The planks and stuff are true…hmmm what was the point…
28. copperdragon - February 13th, 2008 at 7:53 am
i think the concept of the “money pit” was the basis for the latest National Treasure movie.
29. SlickWilly - February 13th, 2008 at 7:55 am
Very cool list, Jamie.
30. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 7:56 am
Mom424: The wick theory was not able to scientifically work in the case of Jeannie Saffin - which is why she is the most interesting case so far - due to witnesses they were able to determine the timing of what happened and there was just not enough time for her body fat to allow that reaction.
31. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 7:56 am
SlickWilly: thanks
32. Mystern - February 13th, 2008 at 8:01 am
Awesome list Jamie. I love these lists. There is so much weird phenomena in the world . . . I think I’m gonna go excavate the money pit. I’ve got nothing better to do today.
33. Eric - February 13th, 2008 at 8:02 am
love these mystery lists, they’re my favorite.
the sailing stones seem real creepy to me, and that wow! signal is real interesting too. i had heard of that before but never heard the 72 second explanation with it. weird and cool
34. OptimusChrist - February 13th, 2008 at 8:07 am
I love the unsolved mysteries lists!! Thanks to whoever made it!!
35. Mom424 - February 13th, 2008 at 8:09 am
jfrater; don’t mean to argue but;
Her clothes were burnt, she was alive when they took her to the hospital, she was feeble, etc,, anyway the skeptical enquirer did a better job of organizing the police/medical reports than I can, have a read
http://findarticles.com/p/arti.....62395/pg_1
36. dangorironhide - February 13th, 2008 at 8:10 am
OptimusChrist: If there’s no ‘contributor’ name at the bottom of the list J wrote it.
37. Rocky - February 13th, 2008 at 8:21 am
I find it amusing that a couple of days ago you posted a list entitled “Top 10 Listverse Mistakes” which included an entry about citing sources; yet every entry of this list is taken verbatim from Wikipedia. I see that you have “This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains quotations from Wikipedia” at the bottom of the list, but this article contains nothing but copy and paste from Wikipedia. It seems like you should at least try to re-write the opening paragraph to give it some sort of variation. Why don’t you just have the picture, title and a link to the wikipedia article. I really like this website, but between this article and the science fiction technology article that was lifted verbatim from Cracked.com (with NO citation at all) I am starting to feel your integrity slipping away.
38. Mystern - February 13th, 2008 at 8:27 am
Rocky: I am the one who wrote the science fiction list and I’d like to apologize again for not citing cracked.com for giving me the idea. However, I did not copy any text verbatim.
39. Amanda - February 13th, 2008 at 8:29 am
Rocky- why does it matter where Jfrater gets the information from? The point of this website is top 10 lists, not extensive research. Jfrater might get his information from elsewhere, but he is the one putting it into a top 10 list. I personally do not care if the information is copied from Wikipedia, I still would not have known about a lot of these things without reading about it on this website.
Jfrater- great list! I love the lists about history and “unsolved” stuff.
40. Bob - February 13th, 2008 at 8:30 am
Why lump a belief that the story of Noah is true with “Biblical literalism”? That’s just a pejorative term for the wackos and it isn’t a very useful term since “literalism” doesn’t mean what the word really means in this case (which is slightly ironic).
41. fishing4monkeys - February 13th, 2008 at 8:38 am
Rocky:
Shut up.
42. SocialButterfly - February 13th, 2008 at 8:49 am
Rocky if you reall feel that Jamie’s integrity is slipping away then why don’t you stop reading. As I’m sure you must have figured out by now, nobody cares where the source of the list idea comes from. I don’t understand why you feel the need to point this out, do you really have nothing better to do besides bad mouth the site?
“I find it amusing…” -> Of course you do you pretentious ass. Try finding a class in which you learn not to act as though something has been shoved firmly up your backside.
43. Rocky - February 13th, 2008 at 8:59 am
By the way, let me clairify, I am happy that there is a compilation of interesting Wikipedia articles to read while I pretend to work. And I do realize you add some other information from the articles, basically summeries of the Wikipedia pages. I just wish there was a little more original content.
44. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 9:09 am
Rocky: I am not sure I understand you - are you saying that the articles would be better if I reworded the excerpts from Wikipedia? Because the words are in a different order but telling the same thing, it would be better?
Additionally, if you really want 100% original content only, I am happy to provide that. It will take me around 4 days to write a list so you will get one list every four days. By being able to utilize Wikipedia and other sources it makes it possible for me to give you articles every day.
Incidentally, the comment on the “mistakes” list was about not citing sources - I have done that here and licensed the list appropriately - that is a “correction” of the mistake I was referring to.
45. SocialButterfly - February 13th, 2008 at 9:14 am
Yeeaahhh, what Jamie said…
I personally would like a list everyday, so as you were Jamie. Don’t drink his Haterade.
46. lewis - February 13th, 2008 at 9:16 am
Nice list!”I love these ones!:D
47. chemical_echo - February 13th, 2008 at 9:18 am
If you do another unsolved mysteries list, how about including the Bloop?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloop
48. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 9:24 am
chemical_echo: I did consider the bloop for this list - I will consider it again for the fourth - though it might be nicer to put on the next incredible recordings list perhaps.
49. heavybison - February 13th, 2008 at 9:25 am
Any place i can find Roy Manifold’s pictures?
50. amoondoo - February 13th, 2008 at 9:26 am
LOL when i first read “money pit” i thought it said “monkey pit” hahah oh well..cool list!
51. dangorironhide - February 13th, 2008 at 9:29 am
amoondoo: Aah, so it wasn’t just me that read it like that! haha
52. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 9:32 am
heavybison: I tried but couldn’t find any. It would have been my first choice.
53. longball - February 13th, 2008 at 9:38 am
Always interesting to read about the unexplained and then listen to people give “educated” guesses on what they “think” it is. There is a reason they are unexplained, its because far brighter people than you (i say you figuratively, referring to all nay-sayers and smart-asses) have tried and failed. Hence the term unexplained.
54. toolnut - February 13th, 2008 at 9:49 am
I don’t know why people have to be so negative and act like someone pissed on their Cheerios when all that this website promises is entertainment in the form of lists. You don’t have to find something wrong with everything that is posted. Just be happy it is here for your reading pleasure.
On a lighter note. . . . does anyone else have the heebie jeebies, because I sure do. Stuff like #6 and #9 really creep me out. Great list JF!!
55. Mystern - February 13th, 2008 at 9:51 am
Toolnut: I haven’t heard the phrase “heebie jeebies” in years. But yeah, some of that stuff really crepped me out even though there was no real reason for it.
56. toolnut - February 13th, 2008 at 9:52 am
Haterade?! I like that. . . I’m gonna use that (with your permission of course, SocialButterfly)
57. Kelsi - February 13th, 2008 at 10:04 am
Yay, you used my money pit idea. =)
I LOVE the unsolved mysteries lists…although they do creepy me out a little when I read them alone, haha. And honestly, I don’t think anyone has a problem with you using Wikipedia for your text aside from whatshisface…Rocky up there, and even he sort of relented a bit. Great list anyway, keep up the excellent work.
58. mikeroz - February 13th, 2008 at 10:20 am
This is List Universe. items we read here are listed or published before hand. If we want original stories we can log to CNN, ABC or AP.
59. longball - February 13th, 2008 at 10:23 am
I WAS being positive. I really do enjoy reading the comments better than the lists. Some people are very intelligent, some people are very not. Always interesting though…
60. toolnut - February 13th, 2008 at 10:29 am
longball: if you are referring to my “negative” comment, that was not directed at you. sorry for the misunderstanding
61. Jackie - February 13th, 2008 at 10:31 am
Possible explanation for number 6? If Jeannie Saffin was on oxygen (which is highly probable for a 61 year old woman) that could explain it. Any little flame near it (possibly a candle?) could set her whole face and body on fire.
Just a thought…I love these mystery lists btw.
62. SocialButterfly - February 13th, 2008 at 11:07 am
Lol… Yeah absolutely toolnut.. I don’t remember where I heard it from but I think it was in a movie preview or something like that.
63. SocialButterfly - February 13th, 2008 at 11:09 am
Maybe Manifold’s pics were confiscated… damn alien coverups
64. Another Kiwi - February 13th, 2008 at 11:14 am
Heavybison: Approx 4 minutes and 5 seconds into this is what is allegedly a Roy Manifold photograph of … something.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v.....re=related
65. goof_ball - February 13th, 2008 at 11:18 am
WIERD!
66. Joss - February 13th, 2008 at 11:26 am
Valentich’s disappearance is freaking crazy. Very interesting list.
67. copperdragon - February 13th, 2008 at 11:26 am
was kinda expecting to see a vile vortex over English Isles and the Western US - though it doesn’t match the pattern.
England/Ireland/Scotland have been inhabited forever, is one of the most haunted places on earth, and has the Loch Ness creature (evidence of a time anomaly??)
Western US is home to lots of strange phenomenon (ie Sedona, Devil’s Tower, Bigfoot)
68. BrotherMan - February 13th, 2008 at 11:32 am
This may be borderline conspiracy theory stuff, but what about chemical contrails?
69. magnolia_snooze - February 13th, 2008 at 11:37 am
#2 (the sailing stones) are probably caused because of the ground has some clay substance and maybe it rains and it may also be windy… thus making clay wet makes it slippery and the wind gives the rocks a push start to their expedition to…… THE MOON!!! but its just a theory, the moon thing was entirely made up by me
70. Christine - February 13th, 2008 at 11:43 am
(Zach
technically Ararat belongs to Armenia and no one is allowed to explore it the Turkish Government forbids it. They don’t allow you to go up there to research or anything.
71. chershey - February 13th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
Pissed on my Cheerios?! Oh god I’m eating Cheerios right now!
Love these lists BTW JF. Anything bizarre is well worth the read (while I pretend to work).
72. Joss - February 13th, 2008 at 12:28 pm
Btw, you might want to post a warning about the combustion pic - it gave me a jolt.
73. CK - February 13th, 2008 at 12:29 pm
Chershey - I’m with you. Reading these fabulous lists help me through my otherwise boring day =).
74. dantheman - February 13th, 2008 at 12:35 pm
Great list. only heard of noah’s ark and the sailing stones. plan on seeing the latter this summer. and the oak pit was very interesting
75. King of the Horizon - February 13th, 2008 at 1:04 pm
for the sailing stones it could possibly be just gravity or maybe even magetism
76. ihavelegs - February 13th, 2008 at 1:09 pm
fantastic, some new ones there for me -
The lad in #4 seems very strange; for example his apparrant ability to communicate - surely if he was imprisonned all his life then his language skills would be severly retarded???
We had a localised ‘Hum’ that I’ve not been able to google for any further information.
Apparantly it was associated with the large BBC radio masts - certain people could detect it audibly, others reported it vibrating solid objects emitting recognisable radio shows!
The one mystery that really confuses me - and has done since I learnt about it is the levitation magic trick…
4 people stand arround a seated volunteer - and attempt a lift with just their fingers at joints about the body - they cant lift the fella…
then hands are place above the persons head for a few seconds, and next time they attempt a lift he presto - the person is light as a feather??? very very very strange!!!
77. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 1:11 pm
ihavelegs: I have tried that levitation thing - it is incredibly spooky how it works every time. I have no idea why either.
78. Crimanon - February 13th, 2008 at 1:14 pm
Something on discovery channel about a year ago, there was something like, “The Bermuda Triangle and the Devils Sea are exactly Geographically opposite.” Weird.
79. SlickWilly - February 13th, 2008 at 1:18 pm
ihavelegs: I have an old Reader’s Digest compilation of weird and unexplained events called “Unexplained Mysteries” or something similary ominous, that mentions the case of Kaspar Hauser. The short summary of the story states that the boy could only say a couple of short, rehearsed phrases, one of which was: “I want to be a soldier like my father.” I can get the source on that tomorrow, if you’re interested at all.
80. Crimanon - February 13th, 2008 at 1:19 pm
ihavelegs: Simple Suggestion, You are told repeatedly that you are not going to be able to pick that person up. TADA! you can’t. Now he tells you that the only way to pick that person up is by doing whatever action he decides, thus releasing you from the already implanted suggestion. you have to be pretty good with words or something to do it right.
81. xcar27 - February 13th, 2008 at 1:20 pm
fantastic list. I had a book of “Unexplained mysteries” that was great, one of my favorites had to do with a golden statue in south america, a skull’s eyes had the tendency to light up.
82. SlickWilly - February 13th, 2008 at 1:21 pm
(cont. from above)
Further, I think that the boy explained all of the things about the cell and masked man later on in life, when he had learned to communicate properly, or at least adequately.
83. ihavelegs - February 13th, 2008 at 1:37 pm
Crimanon: perhaps it does take that form, however I have done the trick so many times - without much flounce and or ceremony - and it always worked… very strange, funny how it doesnt get many mentions these days… levitation must have gone out of fashion with Xbox’s…
SlickWilly: That makes sense, having read about modern cases of enforced issolation from a young age I wondered how it would have been possible to get his story accross…
84. Mystern - February 13th, 2008 at 1:39 pm
ihavelegs: You did not just insult the Xbox! I won’t stand for that! Xboxes will never go out of style!
85. Gr8flDdFn - February 13th, 2008 at 1:44 pm
dude post a warning, i wasn’t rdy for that crispy person. good list tho.
86. Bananas - February 13th, 2008 at 1:45 pm
CSimmons: Even if you dont believe in noahs ak=rk in the biblical sense, it did happen. Several accounts of heavy rain for 40 days have been found.
87. Crimanon - February 13th, 2008 at 2:06 pm
The flood (or several floods) has been spoken of in numerous religious texts. Homers Odyssey, Chinese scriptures, the always discussed Noah and the flood, Even Native American spoken word. Talk to any Geology Professor and they will tell you that I happened. What caused it? Who knows. But, it did happen.
88. toolnut - February 13th, 2008 at 2:27 pm
Ihavelegs: I believe the explanation is pretty simple. . . mind over matter. I experienced this at a leadership conference in Reno. I participated in a few variations of the levitation trick including bending a steel bar with my bare hands, breaking a wood board again with bare hands, and levitating people. Very interesting stuff
89. lola - February 13th, 2008 at 2:37 pm
About Kaspar Houser, I remember reading somewhere that he could barely walk at first because he had been in a sitting laing position his whole life.
90. SocialButterfly - February 13th, 2008 at 2:45 pm
ihavelegs: I used to do that all the time in elementary school!
BTW, I love your name.. cracked me up.
91. lola - February 13th, 2008 at 2:52 pm
Here is an interesting site, for further such lists, it also includes quite a bit of info on Kasper Hauser.
http://www.mysteriouspeople.com/
92. Crimanon - February 13th, 2008 at 3:01 pm
Mystern: The CrashBox is just another way for Bill Gates to tighten his grip on the Youth of today. If everyone had a PS3, we’d all be using Macs. TUX ROCKS!!!!
93. Mariam67 - February 13th, 2008 at 3:39 pm
Very awesome. I love this kind of thing. I especially like the Wow factor and the Oak Island money pit.
94. Angelina - February 13th, 2008 at 4:07 pm
Dude, the picture was the best part!
95. Sharki - February 13th, 2008 at 4:54 pm
Great list! If you want to learn more Oak Island The Straight Dope has a great article.
http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a2_441.html
96. Dunfire - February 13th, 2008 at 5:53 pm
I was a fire investigator for a city fire dept for 30 years. We had an elderly women completley comsumed by fire except her legs in her house. Besides herself, there was some charing of the curtains in the room where she was at and on the ceiling. Strangest damn thing I ever saw.
97. Gravy - February 13th, 2008 at 6:08 pm
I wrote a paper about that hole with treasure in it. Its pretty crazy. Every time they dig deeper, it floods, plus they have trouble getting past the layers of rock and wood. There’s obviously something down there they DONT want us to see.
98. jesse - February 13th, 2008 at 6:24 pm
WRITE MORE LISTS LIKE THIS! they are always the best, GREAT job, number 6 is nuts
99. marqueemark - February 13th, 2008 at 6:38 pm
woo hoo, Oak Island!! Nova Scotia rules!
100. Riddle - February 13th, 2008 at 7:49 pm
Aliens obviously moved the sailing stones. Who else?
101. Nick - February 13th, 2008 at 8:55 pm
Im confused about the last one,some one explain please?
102. Jono - February 13th, 2008 at 9:32 pm
I didn’t find this list as interesting as the other ones.
Spontaneous Human Combustion has just about been fully debunked. Causes range from a rare condition where the person holds extremely large amounts of electrostatic charge (documented and real) to the wick effect.
Oak Island is the best mystery, should of been higher on the list. They did core samples and found gold, and one core sample pushed through something like a bed of coins. I’d be interested to go there and search adjacent areas.
There are a lot of better mysteries that have been missed too:
-Anastasia Romanov
-Irish Crown Jewels
-Belmez Faces
-Chase Vault
and these still very good ones:
-Spring-heeled Jack
-Lost Dutchman Gold Mine
-Devil in Devon
And finally, I have some ideas for lists that would rule:
-Top 10 Solved Mysteries (Crop circles, Cottingley Fairies etc)
-Top 10 Lost Wonders of the World (Pink and White Terraces, Collosus of Rhodes, Temple of Artemis etc)
-
103. NSEW - February 13th, 2008 at 10:55 pm
i remember hearing about the money pit on an episode of the top ten unfound treasures of america or something like that on the travel channel
see mom i told u i can learn stuff from watching tv!
104. jfrater - February 13th, 2008 at 11:53 pm
Jono: Spring Heeled Jack was a tale invented in the Victorian age with no footing in reality. Anastasia Romanov’s body (along with her brother Alexei) weremost likely found last year and are just waiting final test results for verification - the preliminary results state that there is a “high degree of probability” that they are the bones of the last two missing members. Good ideas though! Thanks.
105. jesse - February 14th, 2008 at 12:23 am
i spent like 4 hours looking up oak island, AMAZINg shit. jesus sooooooooooooo coool
aghhhhhhhhh i just want to know the truth
106. henry - February 14th, 2008 at 1:35 am
Latest Money Piit news and some amazing new photos of inside Borehole 10X -
http://www.oakislandtreasure.co.uk
107. Dawn Bearer - February 14th, 2008 at 3:20 am
My favorite is #9, creepy, the recordings made it creepier.
108. Drogo - February 14th, 2008 at 4:31 am
One theory on Spontaneous Human Combustion is that severe stress causes a chemical reaction within the body. If that was true I would have gone “KABOOM” many years ago.
109. Frazzzld - February 14th, 2008 at 5:15 am
Thanks for including the Playa Racetrack stones. I’ve always been fascinated by that one… specially because no one has ever seen them move or caught it on film.
As for Noah’s Ark, I beleive it is possible that could be what is left of it. I don’t think Turkey has allowed any Archeology since the guy who first brought it to light in the 80s (I think it was the 80s). So we may never know.
110. Frazzzld - February 14th, 2008 at 5:28 am
Here is a web site of the guy who did get to do some archeology in the area beleived to be Noah’s Ark. Im not sure if I believe everything he claims but he does have a lot of pictures from the ground which I found interesting.
http://pilgrimpromo.com/WAR/
111. SlickWilly - February 14th, 2008 at 8:01 am
Jayfray: People seem to be into bitching about why this didn’t make this list and that didn’t make that list….they don’t seem to realize that, for a lot of the more popular lists, you do sequels from time to time. A couple of people have brought up some cool unsolved mysteries that haven’t made any of the previous lists….so I would say just issue an open statement saying that, yes, somewhere along the way, there will be *another* top 10 unsolved mysteries list. (I’m all for this, by the way….people, including myself, love the mystery lists and won’t be at all chagrined to see another one at some future date.
) Keep up the good work!
112. Lewis - February 14th, 2008 at 10:25 am
Really cool list, weird though,
113. R Brown - February 14th, 2008 at 10:51 am
#7 is impossible for there is no God! I am an atheist I HATE GOD! But I KNOW that was a flying saucer and even though NOTHING has happened at the Bermuda Triangle in decades I KNOW it was caused by the WICCAN god hermiosatreegrass.
God sucks, he hates me and hates you too! Wait a minute, He would you because there is not God! All these crooked preachers prove it!
Tired ass athiests
114. Gloomcookie - February 14th, 2008 at 11:23 am
My first post too put up here but I did want to mention on the Kaspar case that it is also reported that he could see and read in the dark and had heightened senses.Though he was murdered before there was ever any real documented proof of it. Its from the book I have (100 strangest mysteries by Matt Lamy) email me cause if you want more stuff about the other cases ^_^
115. SlickWilly - February 14th, 2008 at 1:56 pm
R Brown, are you feeling okay? You might want to take some pepto and lie down.
116. Randall - February 14th, 2008 at 2:11 pm
Some comments:
The WOW signal: unfortunately, the signal could not be found again, and has never been found since. Some say this argues against it being a valid signal of extraterrestrial origin, (i.e, it was a mis-identified terrestrial signal, or a natural fluke of some kind, but not something that originated with an intelligence out in space) but most of the people “in the know” that I’ve talked to (let’s just say I have a personal/professional connection to this one) feel it argues strongly that we should keep looking. Unfortunately, except for a very brief period of government funding to search for such signals (Congress quickly cancelled it) only private individuals are now on the search.
The Playa “sailing stones” or “walking stones” is a mystery that’s more or less been put to rest… last I’d heard a study had been done which correlated instances of strong, sudden rainfall and wind with movements of the stones. Sudden cloudbursts allow a film of water, which falls too rapidly for the ground to absorb, which provides enough lowering of friction for the wind to move the stones.
Kaspar Hauser: While a great and weird story, Kaspar Hauser was almost certainly a semi-disturbed young man who hit upon a bizarre scheme for gaining attention and an easy living from gullible people who bought his illogical tale. His story that he’d been raised in a box-like room, where he was unable to stand, does not ring at all true with his ability to walk fairly normally. He also claimed he’d lived on essentially only bread and water (or the like) and while a classic cliche, such a diet would not be conducive at all to normal health and Kaspar probably would have expired in due course from such a diet. In any case, when he first appeared he was a fairly strong, well-built kid, which argues totally against him being restricted to some prison-like diet in horrible conditions. Furthermore–he quickly learned not only how to speak and write well but learned art and other subjects–something that has been proven to be near impossible for other young people of his age who have been deprived of learning and experiential environments at childhood. Such kids always end up intellectually stunted, yet Kaspar seemed to turn into a regular little prodigy. Finally, his death was clearly a case of a self-inflicted wound, done for attention (as with an earlier attack on his person). It simply got out of hand and he did too much damage to himself. But there were no other footprints found in the snow, in the park where he died, and no one ever saw an attacker in either instance.
117. SlickWilly - February 14th, 2008 at 2:19 pm
Randall: I’ve heard several theories about the WOW signal, one of the most reasonable being that it was simply terrestrial-based radio signals that were being reflected off of the massive amount of space junk floating around in Earth’s orbit. Have you run across any similar theories from the people you have talked to? Or is the general concensus that it in fact could be extraterrestrial in origin?
You also make a good point about the Hauser story. It might just be a case of a weird story being repeated from one historian to another and being written down and embellished as the years have gone by.
118. SlickWilly - February 14th, 2008 at 2:22 pm
Haha…..guess I should have read a little better.
119. Randall - February 14th, 2008 at 2:30 pm
Slick:
The *general* consensus on the WOW signal… well, that’s hard. There *are* people who believe it was of terrestrial origin, in the nature of a reflection of some kind (the space junk idea is a new one–I’d heard other theories about it) but a lot of people in the biz say that circumstances make it unlikely, that it just doesn’t wholly fit with some sort of terrestrial-produced oddity.
The bottom line is, we should be looking harder and funding more research. But then again there’s others I know who don’t like research money being diverted to SETI ideas when it could go to bigger space telescopes and so on. But most people say we should be looking.
No one says it IS of extraterrestrial origin–they don’t say stuff like that. Just that it COULD have been.
Hauser—I don’t think we can put that down to embellishment. The records of the time are extensive and contemporaneous. No, rather, his story simply doesn’t gibe. And people in that day had no knowledge of how such deprived children would grow up and behave.
120. Randall - February 14th, 2008 at 2:41 pm
More comments:
Vile Vortices: Ivan Sanderson’s crackpot idea (god bless him, he was a very good biologist but a lousy theorist–and far too credulous–remind me to tell you all the Minnesota Iceman story some time). But there is absolutely no mystery to the Bermuda Triangle. Insurance researchers have proven that there are no more losses and disappearances in the region than you would expect for one of the heaviest-traveled ocean regions on earth. Most of the great mysteries which built the reputation of the Triangle (Flight 19, etc.) were all heavily embellished and distorted by writers (Charles Berlitz for instance) and the facts are far more mundane. There’s nothing mysterious about disappearances at sea. The ocean is VAST and ships, planes and debris can be swallowed in no time. Storms and rogue waves can account for a lot of so-called “mysterious disappearances.”
Noah’s Ark, of course, is total BS. Not that it wasn’t probably based on some ancient Sumerian source story, of a much more localized, brief flood. But a worldwide flood, with a giant ark that lands on a mountaintop? Uh uh. There is no geological evidence for any such flood, and even the original Hebrew does not state the Ark landed on Ararat itself.
The Oak Island money pit: A) that’s unlikely a photo of the actual pit. The exact location of the original pit has been lost. B) forget all the theories about pirates, etc. If anything was buried in the pit (probably something was) then it was the work of talented engineers with a large workforce, who had time and resources to create the thing. The best theory I’ve heard is that a French party, escaping from Quebec, hid the swag from their holdings in the colony there, in hopes of keeping it out of the hands of the British.
121. Scar.. - February 14th, 2008 at 4:01 pm
I don’t understand the WOW one at all.
Someone care to explain?
122. GRUMPYNZ - February 14th, 2008 at 4:52 pm
Great list. The unsolved mystery lists are always a good read, and are my favourite lists on the site.
123. Shorty - February 14th, 2008 at 7:04 pm
Sweet list! Tho reading it on my own at 2 in the morning made it creep me out a bit. The wow signal made me draw my curtains so that I couldnt see the sky at all (sad I know). But the money pit is really interesting. It would be cool if things were found there tho it would be funny if it was just made for absolutly no reason.
124. davo - February 14th, 2008 at 11:11 pm
Please remove number 7. Noah’s ark never happened. Unless poeple are uneducated enough to belelive all animals on the planet paired up and got on a big boat. Puh-lease.
125. Miss Destiny - February 14th, 2008 at 11:22 pm
One stupid little photo of something that MIGHT be an Ark and the Atheists decide they simply MUST have a go at the believers. For crying out loud, give it a rest and let people believe what they want without insulting them!
I don’t know if the Ark (or any other Biblical stories for that matter)happened, I wasn’t there at the time. I figure it’s highly unlikely. But really, part of me hopes that it could be proven just so you lot shut up.
126. davo - February 14th, 2008 at 11:27 pm
yeah thats not going to happen i’m afraid.
127. davo - February 14th, 2008 at 11:35 pm
you’d feel like insulting an adult who believed in Santa Claus or fairies because of the sheer absurdity of it. well, to me its the EXACT same thing. Plus I didn’t insult anyone. I simply implied (correctly) that i think anyone who believes 2 of every animal (read: millions)on the planet got onto one boat a few thousands years ago would have to have little or no knowledge of history etc. ie uneducated. When people stop believing in fairytales and rubbish or prove us wrong, THEN athiests will shut up.
128. Drogo - February 15th, 2008 at 3:03 am
To Shorty (#123):
Even if you don’t see the aliens doesn’t mean they’re not there… You might pull open the curtains only to find an alien staring back at you through the glass. (Mwa-ha-ha-ha)
129. Jaffa - February 15th, 2008 at 3:36 am
I love these unsolved mysteries lists, I’ve always been way into these kinds of things. Great list.
Davo: Being an atheist myself, I’ve gotta say; shut the frell up. It’s atheists like you who give the rest of us bad names, just like it’s Phelps gives christians bad names, or Bin Laden for Muslims.
130. Devon - February 15th, 2008 at 7:00 am
Uh Phelps is not a Christian…read his doctrinal statement.his ‘church’ consists of him and his family….Bin Ladin adheres to Islamic theology and yes, he is a muslim in good standing! Poor comparison!
As for Noah’s Ark, it is indeed a strong possibility regardless of what fundy athiests want to believe!
The story of a cataclysmic flood is recorded in throughout ancient civilizations…some of them predating the Torah!
As for the original Hebrew in Genesis, it refers not necessarily to a one mountain but to the Mountain Range..
Also, it is possible in the Hebrew to understand the flood as a more local albeit horrific flood as opposed to a Universal flood!
One thing that will be funny is watching the athiests jaws drop when the Ark, or what is left of it, is found one day!
Of course..being athiests, I’m sure they will never admit they are wrong…lol….
131. SlickWilly - February 15th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
*sigh* Can we forgo the atheist/theist convo this time around? Neither group will ever admit that they are wrong….mostly because neither group can prove that they are right. So let’s save the atheist/theist discussion either a) for the forums, or b) a religious themed list. Preferably the former.
132. loseitbonkers - February 15th, 2008 at 12:39 pm
i think i remember hearing something about a spot in california where the gravity is all haywire.
maybe i remember wrong.
oh, by the way, no one here can prove that the great flood did or did not happen, hence why it’s an unsolved mystery.
so please kindly grow up and give it a rest.
133. Frazzzld - February 15th, 2008 at 7:24 pm
Loseitbonkers: I don’t know if there a place like that here in California but there is a place in Oregan that has what they call a Vortix (sp?) where weird things happen.
134. Jono - February 16th, 2008 at 12:55 am
Jfrater: Spring-heeled jack had a large number of localized sightings, do a bit of a read about how many, and even if it’s just a case of hysteria, it’s still significant as it was as widespread as some other creatures are now.
Randall: The pit has never been lost (not after the modern finding of it anyway) and that is a real picture of it. The only reason for the non-excavation of it is the huge depth and the complexity of the flooding mechanism which makes moving the earth very difficult under the water. The expenses for such a venture could also possibly total more than the treasure, as it’s unknown how much is down there. And it was also speculated that British Royal Engineers are the ones responsible.
135. Miss Destiny - February 16th, 2008 at 3:00 am
Hmm, you’re making a negative implication about something people believe, but that’s not insulting? Righty then. . .
I’m not the type of person to insult or judge people for what they believe. It would be completely hypocritical of me, given my wacky beliefs. I don’t feel foolish about it at all. I have things going on, a job, a boyfriend, I live in the real world. I just believe in more than myself and the things around me.
What’s wrong with believing in Santa Claus or fairies? I am an adult who believes in both, as well as dragons, unicorns, angels and a ton of other things that aren’t considered ‘normal’. What’s wrong with wanting a little bit of magic and wonder in an otherwise mundane life?
Some people want to believe in things, and some people don’t. Big deal. There’s no need for comments like that. You don’t like the choice(s) on the list? You could submit your own list that’s more in tune with your tastes, rather than being so negative.
136. Lewis - February 16th, 2008 at 2:54 pm
I have to say that the noah’s ark one is almost, no, definitely bullshiz,
137. Lee - February 17th, 2008 at 12:58 pm
noah’s ark did happen yes, but i doubt they found it.
138. Randall - February 18th, 2008 at 7:01 am
Jono:
My info on the pit may be out of date. Last I knew, in the 80s the original site of the pit was considered lost.
If it’s since been re-discovered, that’s news to me.
139. ToKiLoKi - February 21st, 2008 at 3:50 pm
Davo is just obviously not very intelligent, but its OK, i forgive him.
First of all, the book of Genesis was written a long time ago by someone who -wasn’t- around at the time. the stories were passed down by oral tradition, etc, so the writings in them might not be entirely scientifically accurate.
“2 of every animal were put on the boat.” You say thats dumb, but you have to remember how advanced biology was back then, and how many creatures were actually discovered in that area at that time.
Lets imagine, if you lived in Western Texas your whole life. With no outside knowledge of the world around you, apart from what you’ve seen where you live, I imagine it’d be entirely plausible for you to fit 2 of every animal you’d seen on a boat the size of a football field.
Just remember that Genesis is largely a book of moral teachings (God created Man, Man became fallen, etc etc etc). Atheist’s largest mistake is using the book of Genesis against Christians because they believe it to be scientifically inaccurate, thus making the Bible “a book of fairy tales”. The Bible IS accurate - i believe it traces the lineage of David back over 20 lineages. You’d have a hard time doing that today, even with access to the internet.
140. M West - February 24th, 2008 at 10:09 am
Just call me “Noah it all or nothing.” I am in agreement with CSimmons’ Feb 13, and Randall’s Feb 14, comments that Noah and the flood has not happened! Maybe, not yet. As with many Biblical metaphorical stories ( i.e. Genesis 10 has correlative similarities with Ezekial 38, where most of the names of Noah’s grandchildren are mentioned as NATIONS in the Ezekial text. “…which pertains to the latter days or end of times.”)By the way, the ark contained both “tame” and “untamed” animals paired, which doubles the number of animals.
As for Vorteces, curiously intriging, but, who knows? Feb 15, Frazzzid, Would like to hear more on Oregon Vortex, where “weird things happen.” Have you heard anything about Indian tribe of Mt Shasta mysteriously disappearing? Also, a sophisticated submarine was lost in an underworld cavern, off the northern California coast, extending several hundred miles inland from the continental shelf?
The WOW signal…Big Deal. Total waste of time and money. Sounds fabricated. What a coincidence—a 72 second signal, just as predicted.
Wake up, people. It’s been reported that they [aliens] are living right under our feet. Has anyone checked out underground alien cities on YouTube, some estimated to pre-exist ancient Egyptian times. They say our government is fully aware, and co-exists with these alien entities in underground cities. Many subterranian cities exist throughout the world, interconnected by subterranian tunnels.
141. jrjb - February 25th, 2008 at 4:54 pm
These lists are great! Except for: I’m no atheist but explanation for the Noah’s Ark be anymore more boring? (sorry JFrater). I’d rather see Evan Almighty again than trying to read that.
142. Oak Island - February 26th, 2008 at 8:58 pm
Mid Summer 2005 Canadian First Nations Keith Ranville set out from his Vancouver home to investigate a at the time a Oak Island’s diminishing place of interest. But a new Oak Island begining emerged through Keith’s traveling research studies a simple unencrypted solution was generated to resolve this elaborate now 213 year-old treasure mystery. The close examination of Oak Island clues proclaimed a interesting triangle theory’ in-which was instrumental in locating the core to understanding and reviving the Oak Island treasure mystery. cont.. http://oakislandmoneypitblogspotcom.blogspot.com/
143. Ruprecht - February 27th, 2008 at 9:59 am
Another great unsolved list, damn i love mysteries, never heard of the money pit before-very interesting.
How about including some of these for the next one:
The Dogon Tribe and their knowledge of the stars
The Oera Linda Book-history of a lost continent?
Was Piri Re’is Map based on other maps going back to 6000 BC?
M’Quhae’s encounter with Sea Monsters in 1848
The Tunguska explosion
Why is Richard Meadley such a tw*t?
Any theories?
144. Ben - March 3rd, 2008 at 2:48 am
I think another good mystery could be about the rods.
Anybody know something about that?
145. Frazzzld - March 6th, 2008 at 2:13 pm
M West: Here is the web site for the Oregon Vortex House of Mystery. They also have a short video you can watch.
http://www.oregonvortex.com/
146. Frazzzld - March 6th, 2008 at 2:15 pm
M West: As for the Mt. Shasta tribe and also the lost sub., No I haven’t heard about that but sounds like it would be worth looking into.
147. Preston - March 7th, 2008 at 1:47 pm
Sailing stones solved
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v.....ing+stones
148. iToast - April 4th, 2008 at 12:53 pm
the sailing rock is probibly only erosion and wildlife.
149. Rylan - April 17th, 2008 at 8:48 am
“I think another good mystery could be about the rods. Anybody know something about that?”
The show Monster Quest on the History Channel recently offered a reasonable explanation of “rods.”
150. Sugarpie - April 19th, 2008 at 7:08 pm
The Frederick Valentich’s case always fascinated me is last conversation is just chilling..
151. sanjay - April 20th, 2008 at 8:55 am
The myth of great flood and arc is found in almost mythologies of every continent. In Indian mythology the task of building the arc and transporting the man and animalkind is accomplished by Manu. It is argued that whether the myth travelled across the globe or was original creation is still disputed. Howeever it could be the distant memory of the mankind of the remote past that survived through the myth of the arc. It is beleived that once upon the time all continents were united and started to drift away about a billion year ago. In this drifting some continents collided as well and new geography was formed…Himalaya mountain is outcome of such collision…the sea bed rose above to touch the sky. There have been too many ice ages in the history of the earth. Could it be a Great Flood when all continents were united and mankind existed…? Scientists are not sure how old is origin of Human being on this earth. If this is the case great flood…arc by some unknown person and safekeeping on human and other races is not impossible.
The present photograph of Noah’s ark can be a trickery of the nature. Needs to be closely examined. We find human like., God like faces appearing in the rocks, wood and even in vegetables such as mango and papaya. It happens perchance giving way to the wild imagination of imaginitive mankind. Nature is innocent.
152. Springy - April 21st, 2008 at 2:32 pm
jfrater - Spring Heeled Jack most certainly wasnt invented he was a very real mystery
http://blackcatpress.co.uk/Spr.....k_Page.htm
153. Polly Odyssey - April 22nd, 2008 at 1:13 pm
I read about the sailing Stones when I was 6. It scared the hell out of me.
I love these lists!
154. Alex T. - April 25th, 2008 at 6:26 pm
To lazy to read back, but anyone mention the Dyatlov Pass Incident? Definitely one of the creepiest ones out there.
155. guess who - April 26th, 2008 at 4:07 pm
dis is my first time on the web but it’s fab. keep updating it plzzzzzzz.lol
156. FromDaUPofMI - April 29th, 2008 at 10:22 am
There are a few Unsolved lists on here, so i dunno if anyone mentioned it.. but i live in the upper penninsulla of michigan and about an hour from where i live is the “paulding light” ripleys beleive it or not studied it and cant figure it out and also there is a reward for anyone that can figure it out..i have been to it a few times, and despite the way it MIGHT look… there is no way it is car lights…. and no.. there is noone standing there with a flash light.. there are alot of theorys and stories… but..anyways…check it out.. there are some youtube videos about it..and a few websites as well…
157. Aserti - May 2nd, 2008 at 10:42 pm
Cool list. As for the Ararat Anomaly a local farmer reportedly went up the mountain with his son and actually looked inside what he said was a ship that had cages in it. Years later an expedition was mounted and wood was bought down but I think carbon dating placed the wood at a much later time period. But it hasn’t been a more thorough attempt using modern equipment etc.. thanks to the Turkish govt. which is too bad. It would be nice to know once and for all what that is. It has also been reported that what once was a single structure is now broken into at least two sections due to shifting snow and rock, avalanches… I hadn’t heard that The Triangle may have figured into Earharts’ disappearance though.
158. DB - May 7th, 2008 at 6:22 pm
Re: why the Big Ear radio observatory wasn’t moved to track the “Wow” signal. It is built into the ground and is unmovable, hence why it moves with the rotation of the Earth.
http://www.wired.com/images/ar.....vatory.jpg
159. DB - May 7th, 2008 at 6:28 pm
Oh and also, from what I have read, the location of the Money Pit has been described and mapped so many times by so many expeditions it could never really be lost. However, those same expeditions have torn up that portion of the island (as well as other parts believed to hold relation to the Pit) so much that it is unrecognizable from one expedition to the next and the “traps” and “treasure” may be all but destroyed or hopelessly buried.
If I can find it easily I’ll post a link to a piece I read about how the Money Pit is really an incredible meeting of natural occurrences, hoaxes, wishful/fanciful thinking, and perhaps a small oddity or two.
160. A Scientist - May 9th, 2008 at 8:21 am
Vile Vortices: The Bermuda Triangle and other purported danger spots are a myth, a misunderstanding of basic statistics, and in many books, a deliberate misuse and misrepresentation of statistics. After a full examination, the BT and other areas experience no more craft disappearances than are to be expected, given local weather conditions and numbers of ships and planes.
Valentich Disappearance: This is most likely an unwarranted assignment of ‘mystery’ to an otherwise common event - novice pilots losing control of their airplanes. This particular case was made notorious because of the coincidence of Valentich reporting seeing something he couldn’t identify prior to going into the sea. Without the plane, there is not enough data to declare anything, and when one has insufficient data, anything may become a ‘mystery’. This one has been greatly exaggerated and sensationalized by the UFO crowd.
Oak Island Money Pit: Perhaps a symbol of either human hopes or human greed, take your pick. Like many mysteries, this one is based less on what is known, but on what is not known, leaving a blind spot into which people plug their favorite theory. Sort of like a Rorshach test.
Noah’s Ark: ‘Argument From Ignorance’ suppositon. In a nutshell, an ‘anomaly’ is found, and since investigation is stymied by local government, no 100% explanation has been achieved. Another blind spot into which folks may plug whatever they wish. Judeo-Christians, no doubt, would like for it to be Noah’s Ark for obvious reasons. UFO folks see an alien ship. And so on. Basically, the Noah’s Ark identification is based solely on our not knowing what it actually is, probably a rock outcropping.
Spontaneous Combustion: No mystery here. On rare occasions a person with some body fat and wearing flammable clothes manages to set themselves on fire. Their body fat acts like a candle while their clothes act as a wick. The fire burns until the mass of body fat is consumed and then goes out, leaving the arms and legs, albeit in an eerie manner. This has been demonstrated in several TV documentaries (on animals, not humans, of course).
Red Rain: The answer is right there in the listing: “A study commissioned by the Government of India found that the rains had been colored by airborne spores from a locally prolific terrestrial alga.” Then it is ignored two sentences later without cause. Ignoring explanations doesn’t make a thing ‘mysterious’.
Kaspar Hauser: Dubious anecdotal accounts from many many years ago. Who knows or could know now? A DNA test was conducted that failed to conclusively link him, but didn’t quite exclude him either, but requires a genetic mutation to explain the failure to link him. Hmmm.
Man In The Iron Mask: ? Who knows now?
Sailing Stones: No mystery, cause known for a long time. Three key clues are this: flat bottomed stones, only occurs on level ground, and only occurs where there is little rain.
Low precipation creates fine dust which covers the ground. When it does rain it creates a very slick mud coating. If the ground is flat, stones up to a certain size that are flat on the bottom are slowly pushed across the ground surface. This has been filmed and observed.
Wow! Signal” Yes, the signal had the hallmarks of extraterrestrial origins. Unfortunately for folks who think “aliens” when they read the term “extraterrestrial”, stars sytems, galaxies, etc. both emit signals and are extraterrestrial. What was established was a correlation, not causation.
161. A Scientist - May 9th, 2008 at 8:26 am
RE: Sailing Stones - I meant to add that the stones are slowly pushed by the wind. The very slick dust-mud lessens friction enough to allow it. Those of you in Texas, Oklahoma, and other southwestern US states are probably very familiar with how slick that red clay dust gets when moitened by rain.
162. A Scientist - May 9th, 2008 at 8:27 am
That’s “moistened” dagnabbit.
163. Crimanon - May 9th, 2008 at 12:57 pm
A Scientist: Please, show a skeptic some proof. I’ve seen nothing more than that dreaded video. Wind is hardly a good answer, since at ground level it would have to be moving at Upwards of five hundred Plus miles per hour. Sure I’ll watch another video as long as you can give me some simple readings of wind speed, rain fall, and then explain the gouges behind the stones
164. A Scientist - May 12th, 2008 at 7:45 am
You only need typical wind speeds of 10-20 mph or more. The stones don’t go shooting across the silt-mud ground, they move very slowly, just like in the videos. The ‘gouges’ are hardly that. They are the expected tracks caused by the stones’ passing.
Which video is ‘dreaded’? Why is it ‘dreaded’?
I can’t hand you the multiple videos that show this phenomenon. They exist and are available if you look. If one doesn’t know a thing but wishes to, the responbsibility for research is personal. That is to say, it isn’t my responsibility to prove a claim wrong, but the responsibility of those who claim the movement of these stones is in fact ‘mysterious’. The movement is not mysterious, but lives on, not because of what people like yourself know, but because of what you don’t know.
Big clue: The stones which move are only of a certain size range. This is because if they’re too little they present enough surface for the winds to push against, while if they’re too big, they weigh too much to be pushed by the wind. You don’t see boulders or pebbles moving, correct?
In that this ‘mystery’ was debunked over a decade ago, the proof isn’t all over the internet like it was then.
Doubters of this explanation may do one of two things: research the actual explanation or believe in the mystery based on personal ignorance of the explanation.
Bottom line: the burden of proof lies with those who promote the moving stones as a mystery.
165. A Scientist - May 12th, 2008 at 8:00 am
“Please, show a skeptic some proof.”
Please do your own research. The burden of proof is on those who promote the movement of these stones as a ‘mystery’. This was thoroughly debunked over a decade ago and videos of the stones being moved by the wind were all over the internet at the time, but faded away as the mystery died. I’m sure they’re available somewhere.
Big Clue: Only stones of a certain size move. If they’re too little they don’t have enough surface against which the wind can blow to move it. If they’re too big they weigh too much. You never see pebbles or boulders being moved.
“I’ve seen nothing more than that dreaded video.”
Which video? Why is it ‘dreaded’?
“Wind is hardly a good answer, since at ground level it would have to be moving at Upwards of five hundred Plus miles per hour.”
Nonsense. There are videos of the stones moving at wind speeds of 15-20-25 mph. The movement is very slow. They don’t whiz across the ground.
“Sure I’ll watch another video as long as you can give me some simple readings of wind speed, rain fall, and then explain the gouges behind the stones.”
Watch or don’t watch, as you see fit. Means little to me if you wish to believe based on what you *don’t* know about it.
Winds speeds: 10-40 mph on videotape.
Rainfall: Takes very little, just enough to turn the silty-dusty topsoil into a slick raceway. Guess what typically accompanies storms and rainfall? Winds 10-40 mph or more.
Gouges: They are hardly gouges. Just the expected track marks.
Note: Most of these videos are time lapse, so slowly do these stones move.
Note: Track direction *always* matches wind direction as recorded by meteorologists and weather stations.
~*~
This particular ‘mystery’ is similar to the ‘faked moon landing’ and other purported phenomena - after they’ve been thoroughly debunked they lay dormant for a while, maybe 10-12 years, and then reappear to be picked up as genuine by a new crowd of people unfamiliar with the history, unaware the ‘mystery’ was debunked long ago.
166. geronimo - May 12th, 2008 at 11:13 pm
have been scouring all over the net for many mysterious events that have happened over the years…this site seems to cover most of it…. awesome one.
You guys might like to try out the mystery regarding the car which was carrying Archduke Ferdinand when he was assasinated. That car passed on to 7 subsequent people and all were killed off in one manner or another…at last it was loaned to a museum which later caught fire and was razed to the ground. have not found much about it on the net. I believe the car was a Bugatti.
another story(may be apocryphal)When a ship called the GREAT EASTERN was being built, a riveter and his boy apprentice vanished; no one realized at the time that they had been sealed inside the hull. The ship, the largest ever built at that time, got stuck during its first launching. It took 3 months to free it. The ship’s builder, Isambard Brunel, collapsed on its deck and died a week later. During the next 15 years, several disasters happened on board. Five firemen died when a funnel exploded. While it was in port being repaired, a storm damaged it even more. The captain and a cabin boy drowned. A sailor got crushed by the wheel. Another man was lost overboard. The disasters continued until the ship was abandoned, just 15 years after it was built. When it was broken down for scrap, the skeletons of the riveter and his apprentice were found sealed in the hull.
you may also want to have a look at this site
www.unexplained-mysteries.com
167. Crimanon - May 13th, 2008 at 5:45 pm
A Scientist: You’ll have to excuse me for my ignorance. I don’t have quite the resources of a scientist. Unlike you, I have only what I can find, Internet, Library, museums. I have no favors owed, I have no one of like stature to point me in the right direction. I think that you can agree that One video hardly constitutes Proof. I have indeed search/scoured the internet for other videos, YouTube as well as Accredited Universities and organizations archives. I would’ve thought that NOAA may have had some interest in the phenomena. I guess that’s just the common sense of a layman. Oh well, you just keep doing your thing an berating the “Unenlightened” and I’ll do my thing by telling you all to help out or get bent.