check these terrifying unsolved mysteries, seriously strange and creepy
1.
Robin Hull often spoke in a language his mother couldn't understand. She contacted a professor of
Asian languages, who identified the language as a dialect spoken specifically in the northern region of
Tibet.
Robin said that he went to school many years ago in a monastery, and that is where he learned to speak that language. However, the truth was that Robin wasn’t even of school-going age and had yet to set foot in a classroom.
The professor investigated further based on Robin’s descriptions and eventually settled on a monastery in the
Kunlun Mountains that matched the information the young boy was able to relay. Robin’s story inspired the professor to actually travel to Tibet, where he located the monastery.
2. A sudden distress signal was received from the ship
SS Ourang Medan in
1947, it said “all officers including capt dead, lying in chartroom. Possibly whole crew dead” and then finally, second later, “I die”.
When
Silver Star crew located and boarded the apparently undamaged
Ourang Medan in a rescue attempt, the ship was found littered with corpses (including the carcass of a dog)
sprawled on their backs, the frozen faces upturned to the sun with mouths gaping open and eyes staring, the dead bodies resembled horrible caricatures", with no survivors and no visible signs of injuries on the dead bodies.
A fire then broke out in the ship's
No. 4 cargo hold, forcing the boarding parties to evacuate the
Dutch freighter, thus preventing any further investigation.
Soon after, Ourang Medan was observed to explode and sink.
3
. In the early summer of 1867, just before she turned 17,
Caroline contracted tuberculosis and passed away a few short weeks later. Her sister
Selma wanted to create a lasting memorial and asked a sculptor to cast a grave in her sister’s likeness.
The lifesize and lifelike sculpture depicts Caroline just as if she fell asleep reading in her own bed. It was soon after Caroline passed away, and the flowers on her grave from the funeral were wilting, that her sister began to notice that a fresh flower
was always on the grave when she visited. Months and then years passed and still no one had discovered who might be leaving the flowers. The cemetery groundskeepers could provide no clue but perhaps they were sworn to secrecy.
4. On
Christmas Eve,
1945, the Sodder family home burned down. The cause was traced to defective wiring despite the fact that
Christmas tree lights were still on after the fire started. The oldest two sons and daughter and the youngest daughter survived,
but the five middle children were missing and no trace of their remains were found. Believing that the fire was a cover for the abduction of their children,
George and
Jennie Sodder spent a fortune on detectives to investigate. In
1968, more than 20 years after the fire, Jennie went to get the mail and found an envelope addressed only to her.
It was postmarked in
Kentucky but had no return address.
Inside was a photo of a man in his mid-20s. On its flip side a cryptic handwritten note read: “
Louis Sodder. I love brother
Frankie. Ilil
Boys. A90132 or 35.” She and George couldn’t deny the resemblance to their Louis,
who was 9 at the time of the fire.
Once again they hired a private detective and sent him to Kentucky. They never heard from him again.
5. The
Dyatlov Pass incident happened in
1959, 9 experienced hikers were found dead scattered across the pass. They had been missing for almost a month after trekking out into the bleak wildness of the
Ural mountains
The first bodies — frostbitten and frozen stiff — were discovered lying in the snow on flat land near a river, a mile from the tent, next to the remains of a long burnt-out fire.
Around 350 yards away lay the corpse of the expedition's leader.
Nearby, a search dog sniffed out the remains of 2 more hikers. The bodies were in a line
200 yards apart, as if they had been trying to crawl behind each other back up to the shelter of the tent, but never made it.
Another two months went by before the rest of the group were found, under 15ft of snow in a den they had desperately hollowed out for themselves before succumbing to the cold.
Some of this group had broken bones and terrible internal injuries but, strangely, no external wounds, not even scratches on the skin.
Stranger still, odd bits of their clothing contained higher than normal levels of radiation.
6. In
1984,
Günther Stoll, an unemployed food engineer from Anzhausen, was suffering from a moderate case of paranoia. Prior to his death, he occasionally spoke to his wife of "them," unknown people who supposedly intended to harm him.
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- published: 09 Feb 2016
- views: 484