0:06 Dyatlov Pass Incident. The Miystery of 9 Russian Soviet Hikers Found Death February 26th to May4th 1959 11:55 The Blackout Ripper. RAF Caddet Officer Gordon Fredderick Cummins 23:05 Mystery of Yamashita Gold Prepetrator: - General Tomoyuki Yamashita 30:20 What was Inside this Tunnel that killed 520 Passengers. The Italian Train Mystery of WW2 36:40 Who Killed William II The English aristocrat 1100 AD 45:17 Was it a Shark Attack/Murder, Australia 1935
"While hitchhiking in the Yural mountains" 😆 I don't think they'll have much luck finding someone to give em a ride in the middle of the Yural mountains lol
Pertaining to the hikers. During my tenure in the Marines, I've personally witnessed delirium from dehydration in the cold, underestimating the need for hydration in the cold. I've also witnessed hyponatremia (albeit never in cold weather conditions) from under-eating over-hydrating. The incident I was there for, the Marine had no clue where or even who he was, and was identified because he was staring into the treeline swaying back and forth, away from others. So there might be a simple explanation that they didn't think to test for back then.
Additionally, ever heard of what skiers call a "yard sale"? A fairly simple fall/crash that results in zero injury may still fling every remotely loose piece of clothing off the body. I've had it happen to me, personally, and I will forever be amazed at how far apart my hat, goggles, gloves, poles, skis, etc ended up.
@@kingcaesar3693 Those two worked at a nuclear power plant, I've heard. Search The Dyatlov Pass Incident. I'd recommend Lemmino's channel, as that's where I originally heard this case from.
The Dyantlov pass incident is quite strange. I do believe they got scared of something that made them abandon everything and leave as fast as possible. Knowing they were advanced hikers they probably know the sound of an avalanche going off. That would get me going quick. Or the sound of parachute bombs going off around you. These two seem most believable to me. They were only found after 26 days to 3 months (defuse time) after the tragedy. Probably enough time to cover tracks, markings, indentations in the snow.
Except it couldn't have been an avalanche. Being heavily covered in snow isn't the same thing as being totally buried. The avalanche and bomb theory doesn't explain enough of the odd circumstances. Not the campfire spooky stuff, but the real documented facts that happened that can't be adequately explained. It was probably a combination of a couple things, and it was probably something that hasn't been thought of yet.
Lemmino had a good video on the hikers. He proposed that the stove in the tent went awry and filled the interior with smoke. Importantly he showed the hikers proceeded calmly down the mountain to escape the fumes.
The Dyatlov Pass Students were NOT HITCHHIKING, they were Backpacking and Wilderness-Hiking. I'm not sure why that irked me as much as it did, but I firmly believe that the Student's Memory alone is worth telling their story correctly. That said, good video, and well done!
I think that the Dyatlov expedition tragedy has classic elements of your good ol’ hypothermia of Russian winters - and if im not mistaken - the last stages of hypothermia include PARADOXICAL UNDRESSING - where the person believes that by taking their clothes OFF - they will feel warmer. Late stage of Hypothermia also includes mental confusion and unusual behaviour in general- that’s what I assume most likely happened to these unfortunate young people. RIP
@@K1995ify , researchers that worked on this case found only traces of beta radiation on sweater. Activity that they found is not enough to harm human without digesting it or something. And no signs on burns or any radioactive damage, so probably it was just extreme cold and lack of preparation. For me as a Russian who hiked in cold weather it's pretty recognizable thing, without proper training and gear most people in extreme cold will be exhausted very quick and probably just will give up and die. People got used to being in comfort with clothes and worm place everywhere, so we think that cold is just cold and no biggie, we tend to forget how dangerous it actually is for us. and about radiation and where it came from...well, our forests hide a lot of stuff.)
@@evinroof8705 I think that pretty much all of the weird behaviors they engaged in were brought on by - again hypothermia. During the last stages of hypothermia- people are known to do weird stuff like paradoxical undressing for example- which is when the person in his last stages of hypothermia will remove their clothes believing it will make them warmer
I think the other problem people have with accepting the avalanche hypothesis is most people hear that word and get the image of the giant wall of snow careening down a mountainside crushing everything in its path. That is just one scale of avalanche, not all avalanches. The smallest avalanches are sluffs and are less than 50m and around 100 cubic metres of snow and unlikely to actually bury someone (per European avalanche services). A slab avalanche at the higher scale of a sluff could perfectly explain what happened. Buuuuuut that's not as exciting so like you said, no one wants to hear it.
I think that the Soviets covered up a gas weapon test which the gas drove the hikers into mass hysteria, the residue of the gas, could have been noticeable in the area possibly by tracings on the land.
To the hikers, the only reason I can think to why they checked radioactivity is that Russia lost some 200 mini nuclear reactors. One was found by a hiking group thinking it was a bit of scrap or a heater (since it was quite warm & melted snow on & around it). Kyle Hill has a video on this in his nuclear stories series.
I believe this was also solved. Avalanche that sent them into a panic, hypothermia explains them stripping (sometimes it makes you feel insanely warm even though you're freezing to death), and the eyes and tongue were likely scavenged by wildlife
History is sometimes a mystery we can get a general idea about certain things but the truth is that it's hard to know exactly what happened, with current technology it is easier but not perfect
@@hikari1690 no that isnt always true, not for all of history. History wasnt just written by the "winners" also everything pertaining to history didnt involve a win/lose situation. What is more accurate & not misleadingly trying to paint everything throughout history with such a broad brush is that history was written by those who actually wrote- widespread literacy hasnt been a common thing for the majority of the population for very long at all. Yes at times its been written by the "winners" but there are cases where the "losers" have written about the same subject, same specific topic/time/location. Take WW2 for example there have been many German writers/historians who have confirmed whats been written by the "winners". Depending on the historical topic there are at times multiple sources outside of anything written, the eruption of Mt Vesuvius (yes there is written account) there is also carbon dating that aligns with the date of that written account along with tangible evidence- Pompeii & Herculaneum
I’m curious why the Italian train deaths were included in this episode? In your own coverage, you said that the death were due to carbon monoxide and even read the inquest report. Did I miss an aspect that is still unsolved?
Curious if they make more such scary storis of the past. As there are so many to choose from like H.H. Holmes, Karl Denke, The Boys of the Yuba City, Albert Fish...
About the hikers,its proven hyperthermia can make a person crazy, so my theory is that extreme hyperthermia set in and made them crazy or another theory is that extremely cold winds were pushing the tent violently and it was nearly impossible to open the tents door and considering 9 men were in that tent and it looks like the tent cant even hold half that number and they decided to use a knife to escape but at the last minute the tent door finally opened, so they ran in different directions, it could be possible that they all ran in different directions and just got to each other as they went in similar ways and with lack of food and water they slowly died from that reason, and also suffocation like the 3rd group near the ravine and 2nd died of the extreme winds just following after the extreme wind that violently pushed the tent and 1st had ran and died because of lack of clothing. Don't take this seriously, Its just a theory.
The hikers story is still such a fascinating question mark for me, I just don't believe that all 10 of them, with all their experience suddenly lost their minds due to hypothermia at the same exact time. You would NEVER cut a hole in your tent unless you had no choice, also what's with the radiation!? I've never heard a good explanation for this event to this day 🤷🏾♂️.
Radiation is natural. Two of hikers worked in nuclear plants. The clothing identified with "radiation" (which is only maybe 1.5x the average amount any person has around them) belonged to the two hikers. Plenty of logical explanations for the story, it's just not captivating
I believe the russian backpackers was solved. it was due to an avalanche while they were in the tent and one of the friend was working at a nuclear-related manufactory hence the radiation
I love this channel, but the first story has been solved, but I don't think it was very well announced. In case you haven't heard, it was an avalanche. I think Answers With Joe did a story on it.
It was not an avalanche. The hikers had decided to make camp on the snow covered mountain side. In order to have a flat space to pitch the tent, they dug snow off of the slanted mountain side until they had a small flat area. At some point before the hike, the tent had been modified to include a portable stove, which would keep the inhabitants of the tent comfortably warm. After pitching the tent, the hikers retired into the tent and went to sleep. In the middle of the night, a specific known type of snow movement (I dismember the name of this phenomenon), but which has rarely happened, caused some volume of snow to slide off the snow base immediately above the tent, and fall directly onto the tent, crushing it to the ground. This event caused immediate pandemonium inside the tent. In their panic, they cut open the tent fabric, and emerged into the great outdoors, clad only in what they had been wearing while sleeping, which wasn't much. In their panic, they fled downhill towards the treeline in slightly different trajectories, and then died in slightly different ways. The tent had been covered with too much snow for the hikers to clear off, and it had a large slit in the side. Therefore, the hikers could not go back upslope to recover the tent into a life saving shelter, nor could they recover their clothing from the tent interior. After that, all of the supposedly odd deaths were simply the results of insufficiently dressed people trying different ways to save themselves from cold, and ultimately failing. I wish I had kept the link, but I am certain that anyone could google it, and locate the article. It is a truly fascinating event that has kept me wondering for decades!
A channel called LEMINO also did a good video on this incident and also concluded that it may have been an unfortunate accident caused by the hikers…..
Very good job fellows!! Congratulations y'all. Pertaining to the hikers. During my tenure in the Marines, I've personally witnessed delirium from dehydration in the cold, underestimating the need for hydration in the cold. Does it say anything about the biggest toxic spill in New Palestine Ohio dudes?
11:18 Perhaps, the tent was crowded and the hikers were feeling greatly inconvenienced by this. Then either someone got irritable about it and a fight started, or someone tried something (or was accused of trying something) with one of the girls and a fight started-causing someone to freak out and pull a knife. Somewhere along the way, the tent was cut and everyone panicked and ran out. That theory is just as likely as the rest. 🤷🏻♂️
3:08 how come the snow didn't cover their tracks? I Know this is just animation but it represents what they've really found. So it's seems they've been dead for a long time which means the snow would've covered the footsteps 👣.. that's why I don't trust these BS stories..
Hikers: I think some or all of them went crazy either due to dehydration or eating tainted food like wild mushrooms (or tainted food cans). Then either hallucinated or tried to run from someone going crazy/turning on each other. The removal of clothes etc can actually paradoxically be a symptom of hypothermia, so could happen after they were forced to run away.
How did they not catch "HitchHiking" while QC'ing there story. Big blunder there. You would think the speaker would have caught his own mistake while reading this story...
14:50 Lol, pretty sure they didn't have "databases" back then. Pretty sure they compared prints manually by hand from an archive of finger prints, so a LOT harder to find a match.
This is a brilliant article. Should the subject matter interest you, a closely related book is highly recommended. "The Silent Bridge: Echoes of the Unspoken Past" by Emma Wick
1.- The hikers found out something that they shouldn't be seeing and the Soviet Army rounded them up and made it look like accidental deaths, the ones who died by impact of their skulls were killed by beatings with the buth of a rifle.
I wonder if it could have been a bear with the hikers in Russia? Like the tent was crushed and ripped up so maybe it attacked the tent and they all scattered and then got lost in the dark snowy area for too long and froze. Maybe they were underdressed to keep their gear from getting sweaty for the next day. If you've ever hiked or camped out like that you want to be sure to keep your gear dry or it's easy to get too cold and since their tent was way too small for the amount of people they had maybe they decided to strip and keep warm with skin contact instead of all pack in in their gear and risk sweating in their gear. It would explain why they didn't have a chance to get gear on
I don't think you can dismiss the avalanche theory so easy. It fits much more than anything else. And considdering how they probably acted, I'm voting for avalanche or massive snowfall. More possible than secret Soviet bombs. I love oogabooga myths too, but let's talk about this rationally.
New research suggest an untimed slab avalanche but the researchers never claimed not to have solved the mystery and there is still missing prices of the story but i agree w u 100%
@@fantasy_4772 That sounds reasonable if you think about it. Could explain the person who tried climbing the tree. They probably did so to avoid being buried.
You would think that William II death could have been solved. You would they they could have identified the arrow or see how was missing one. You would think that everyone would have a unique set and a certain number of arrows.
Dyatlov pass (or however you spell it) It's just another Soviet cover up, for them accidentally killing civilians, not that they cared, but it's just another cover up. It was clearly due to some type of radioactive or nuclear testing, or dumping waste. They died because of the government, I don't think that's much of a mystery. It is the only explanation. The Soviets were notorious for this type of crap, and Chernobyl didn't even have to happen. They could have evacuated everybody, instead, they doubled down and told everybody that everything was fine, and let them drop like flies.
I love this channel, but I have 2 (fairly obvious) notes…both regarding the title: a) you can’t call the episode “…Mysteries You Can’t Solve,” when you literally have the explanation(s) (the train case, which it was obviously carbon monoxide poisoning BEFORE you went ahead and actually STATED AS MUCH in the video itself; as well as the Smith murder case, which was more “successful witness tampering” than a “mystery”) and b) the word “CAN’T” should be capitalized in the title of the video, not the word “YOU.” Capitalizing “you” implies the mysteries CAN be solved, just not by any of us viewers; whereas if “can’t” were capitalized instead, it would imply the mysteries are too difficult/complex/etc. to be solved by anyone, with any resources, that they LITERALLY “cannot be solved” (for the argument as to why this assertion is “false” please refer back to point “a)” herein).
There was a new study in 2021 and a documentary called A Unknown Compelling Force revisited the hiker incident. They settled on a slab avalanche and a certain type of wind that was the most likli culprit
Temperatures can cause hallucinations that's a possible explanation for dyatlov pass incident. (Hypothermia can cause confusion, tiredness, slurred speech, memory loss, lack of coordination, slowed circulation, slowed respiration, irritability during stage 2 of hypothermia these are likely symptoms, (It could be possible for hallucinations to appear somewhat rarely in cases theoretically), and slow brain function all of which support this theory.)
0:06 Dyatlov Pass Incident. The Miystery of 9 Russian Soviet Hikers Found Death February 26th to May4th 1959
11:55 The Blackout Ripper. RAF Caddet Officer Gordon Fredderick Cummins
23:05 Mystery of Yamashita Gold
Prepetrator:
- General Tomoyuki Yamashita
30:20 What was Inside this Tunnel that killed 520 Passengers. The Italian Train Mystery of WW2
36:40 Who Killed William II The English aristocrat 1100 AD
45:17 Was it a Shark Attack/Murder, Australia 1935
It’s not very mysterious now is it
@@lowlife1368 never was after the 2nd story
Uyu
U
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"While hitchhiking in the Yural mountains" 😆 I don't think they'll have much luck finding someone to give em a ride in the middle of the Yural mountains lol
Maybe not for normal people but these were experienced hitchhikers.
Other than your mom, she'll give anything a ride😮
*Ural
@@chaimlevin125 npc
@@johnjesus02 I mean I’d like to think that I’m the main character in my own story.
Pertaining to the hikers. During my tenure in the Marines, I've personally witnessed delirium from dehydration in the cold, underestimating the need for hydration in the cold.
I've also witnessed hyponatremia (albeit never in cold weather conditions) from under-eating over-hydrating. The incident I was there for, the Marine had no clue where or even who he was, and was identified because he was staring into the treeline swaying back and forth, away from others.
So there might be a simple explanation that they didn't think to test for back then.
@Ben got me
Additionally, ever heard of what skiers call a "yard sale"? A fairly simple fall/crash that results in zero injury may still fling every remotely loose piece of clothing off the body. I've had it happen to me, personally, and I will forever be amazed at how far apart my hat, goggles, gloves, poles, skis, etc ended up.
But what about the radiation?
@@kingcaesar3693 Those two worked at a nuclear power plant, I've heard. Search The Dyatlov Pass Incident. I'd recommend Lemmino's channel, as that's where I originally heard this case from.
@@kingcaesar3693 could be from a dye. In the 50s and 60s, uranium oxide was used to make an orange glaze for plates.
The Dyantlov pass incident is quite strange. I do believe they got scared of something that made them abandon everything and leave as fast as possible. Knowing they were advanced hikers they probably know the sound of an avalanche going off. That would get me going quick. Or the sound of parachute bombs going off around you.
These two seem most believable to me.
They were only found after 26 days to 3 months (defuse time) after the tragedy. Probably enough time to cover tracks, markings, indentations in the snow.
@traceGhg7 8 So then why did they separate?
@@andrehorlin6420
went off in smaller groups in search of tacos
Except it couldn't have been an avalanche. Being heavily covered in snow isn't the same thing as being totally buried. The avalanche and bomb theory doesn't explain enough of the odd circumstances. Not the campfire spooky stuff, but the real documented facts that happened that can't be adequately explained. It was probably a combination of a couple things, and it was probably something that hasn't been thought of yet.
@traceghg7832except the tent wasn't burned.
Nope, it's been solved and isn't a mystery.
I suggest anton petrovs video for a detailed break down.
Lemmino had a good video on the hikers. He proposed that the stove in the tent went awry and filled the interior with smoke. Importantly he showed the hikers proceeded calmly down the mountain to escape the fumes.
The Dyatlov Pass Students were NOT HITCHHIKING, they were Backpacking and Wilderness-Hiking. I'm not sure why that irked me as much as it did, but I firmly believe that the Student's Memory alone is worth telling their story correctly.
That said, good video, and well done!
I thought same thing
I'm glad I'm not the only one.
It's also no longer a mystery & it was solved with new snow modelling technology (like ocean modelling but for snow - to keep it simple)
Was going to say same. Only not as nicely.
In 1959 not a lot of Russians owned cars, hitchhiking was nearly impossible.
I think that the Dyatlov expedition tragedy has classic elements of your good ol’ hypothermia of Russian winters - and if im not mistaken - the last stages of hypothermia include PARADOXICAL UNDRESSING - where the person believes that by taking their clothes OFF - they will feel warmer. Late stage of Hypothermia also includes mental confusion and unusual behaviour in general- that’s what I assume most likely happened to these unfortunate young people. RIP
But what about the radiation? I agree with your guess since it definitely lines up with that but I don’t understand the radiation.
@@K1995ify , researchers that worked on this case found only traces of beta radiation on sweater. Activity that they found is not enough to harm human without digesting it or something.
And no signs on burns or any radioactive damage, so probably it was just extreme cold and lack of preparation.
For me as a Russian who hiked in cold weather it's pretty recognizable thing, without proper training and gear most people in extreme cold will be exhausted very quick and probably just will give up and die. People got used to being in comfort with clothes and worm place everywhere, so we think that cold is just cold and no biggie, we tend to forget how dangerous it actually is for us.
and about radiation and where it came from...well, our forests hide a lot of stuff.)
@@K1995ifyit’s Russia! Radiation is not even the worst thing you can find..accidentally… in the forest! 😅
I don't think their deaths are much of a mystery. What made them abandon the safety of their tent in such a hurry is the big mystery of that case.
@@evinroof8705 I think that pretty much all of the weird behaviors they engaged in were brought on by - again hypothermia. During the last stages of hypothermia- people are known to do weird stuff like paradoxical undressing for example- which is when the person in his last stages of hypothermia will remove their clothes believing it will make them warmer
Slab Avalanche is the best explanation for the 9 hikers deaths. I think people refuse to believe it because it’s not supernatural in some way.
Yeah ya know except for all the other reasons they gave that proved an avalanche wasn't possible
huh wow i can’t believe they didn’t think of that!! good thing they didn’t list any reasons why that probably couldn’t be the answer!
@@SoggyMs what reasons? It explains them all very easily.
Then how did they receive those injuries no way an avalanche did that
I think the other problem people have with accepting the avalanche hypothesis is most people hear that word and get the image of the giant wall of snow careening down a mountainside crushing everything in its path. That is just one scale of avalanche, not all avalanches. The smallest avalanches are sluffs and are less than 50m and around 100 cubic metres of snow and unlikely to actually bury someone (per European avalanche services). A slab avalanche at the higher scale of a sluff could perfectly explain what happened. Buuuuuut that's not as exciting so like you said, no one wants to hear it.
Imagine being the hiker who had to turn back in the beginning
I feel sorry for him, id imagine he suffered from extreme survivors guilt
I think that the Soviets covered up a gas weapon test which the gas drove the hikers into mass hysteria, the residue of the gas, could have been noticeable in the area possibly by tracings on the land.
"The science behind infrasound is questionable at best." - from the channel that presented boulder throwing bigfoots in Vietnam as totally legit.
Shut up
😂😂
I think he was just referring the theory that infrasound did it, not that infrasound doesn’t exist/ is questionable
The shark with a knife lmao
To the hikers, the only reason I can think to why they checked radioactivity is that Russia lost some 200 mini nuclear reactors. One was found by a hiking group thinking it was a bit of scrap or a heater (since it was quite warm & melted snow on & around it). Kyle Hill has a video on this in his nuclear stories series.
They weren't nuclear reactors. They were RTG ( radioisotope thermoelectric generator ). They used the heat produced by decay to produce energy.
@@Scalabrio I forgot the technical term for them but reactor was the closest thing my brain pulled to it lol
They weren’t hitchhiking in the first story. They were camping.
He thinks hitchhiking is walking around in the wilderness?
I believe this was also solved. Avalanche that sent them into a panic, hypothermia explains them stripping (sometimes it makes you feel insanely warm even though you're freezing to death), and the eyes and tongue were likely scavenged by wildlife
@@enbeast8350 yeah it was if I remember correctly.
History is sometimes a mystery we can get a general idea about certain things but the truth is that it's hard to know exactly what happened, with current technology it is easier but not perfect
Aliens
It's a mystery how people can truly believe in recorded history when it's the winners who write them
@@hikari1690 no that isnt always true, not for all of history. History wasnt just written by the "winners" also everything pertaining to history didnt involve a win/lose situation. What is more accurate & not misleadingly trying to paint everything throughout history with such a broad brush is that history was written by those who actually wrote- widespread literacy hasnt been a common thing for the majority of the population for very long at all. Yes at times its been written by the "winners" but there are cases where the "losers" have written about the same subject, same specific topic/time/location. Take WW2 for example there have been many German writers/historians who have confirmed whats been written by the "winners". Depending on the historical topic there are at times multiple sources outside of anything written, the eruption of Mt Vesuvius (yes there is written account) there is also carbon dating that aligns with the date of that written account along with tangible evidence- Pompeii & Herculaneum
Simple History animations are the best visual descriptions for your subject matter!
Except for calling ot hitchhiking lmao 🤣 😂 😆 😅
Thanks!
Huvrlu LP} ⁰ pl ok by 😭😭@😭@👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿👍🏿
What happened in Dyatlov Pass was that someone farted in the tent
Well this was certainly an unsettling story. Very heartbreaking but thank you as always for another great video!
Which one?
There’s 6 stories. Are you a bot or did you click off of the video after the first five minutes?
"Yakuza gangsters" That gave me serotonin
Yeah they're synonyms lol
It that the german empire
Yakuza Mafia Gangsters?
Biker Yakuzas
Cheesy queso
The “blackout Ripper” seems pretty well solved to me.
The guy really hated prostitutes like God dang legit all the people he killed were prostitutes or something else like that.
I thought the exact same thing!
I’m curious why the Italian train deaths were included in this episode? In your own coverage, you said that the death were due to carbon monoxide and even read the inquest report. Did I miss an aspect that is still unsolved?
They just said that its mysteries YOU can't solve... cause they already solved it before you 😉
an ad every 1:30? makes it impossible to follow.
Curious if they make more such scary storis of the past. As there are so many to choose from like H.H. Holmes, Karl Denke, The Boys of the Yuba City, Albert Fish...
The boys of the Yuba City aka the American Dyatlov Pass...
About the hikers,its proven hyperthermia can make a person crazy, so my theory is that extreme hyperthermia set in and made them crazy or another theory is that extremely cold winds were pushing the tent violently and it was nearly impossible to open the tents door and considering 9 men were in that tent and it looks like the tent cant even hold half that number and they decided to use a knife to escape but at the last minute the tent door finally opened, so they ran in different directions, it could be possible that they all ran in different directions and just got to each other as they went in similar ways and with lack of food and water they slowly died from that reason, and also suffocation like the 3rd group near the ravine and 2nd died of the extreme winds just following after the extreme wind that violently pushed the tent and 1st had ran and died because of lack of clothing.
Don't take this seriously, Its just a theory.
Hyperthermia? They were hotter than 98.6 F?
@@dbach1025 i think he meant hypothermia, and i can tell by his english that english isnt his first language so pardon him
1:15 a hitchhiking expedition?
top 10 mysteries so mysterious not even the solver squad could solve them
Please upload video about Albert Salvo aka The Boston Strangler
@@azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 i didn't make the video, dummy
Hitchhiking? Hoping a semi would stop by to pick them up?
Last story was recently covered by Mr.Ballen, whole story with a surprising end
I love mrballen best story teller
The hikers story is still such a fascinating question mark for me, I just don't believe that all 10 of them, with all their experience suddenly lost their minds due to hypothermia at the same exact time. You would NEVER cut a hole in your tent unless you had no choice, also what's with the radiation!? I've never heard a good explanation for this event to this day 🤷🏾♂️.
Radiation is natural. Two of hikers worked in nuclear plants. The clothing identified with "radiation" (which is only maybe 1.5x the average amount any person has around them) belonged to the two hikers. Plenty of logical explanations for the story, it's just not captivating
all 9 of them*
The 10th turned back earlier.
@@blipblop1806 which is kind of even crazier when ya think about it.
I agree.
I believe the russian backpackers was solved. it was due to an avalanche while they were in the tent and one of the friend was working at a nuclear-related manufactory hence the radiation
The serial killer guy and the carbon monoxide train seem like not really mysteries if we know what happened
Well, “we” know NOW because he told us, but the title said they’re mysteries YOU can’t solve. So there’s that. 🤷🏻♂️
Shhhhhh, just enjoy the show
@@totallyfrozen i mean I feel like if I was the detective on the case I would figure it out
Don’t u just hate it when you commit suicide and accidentally end up with 3 bullet holes somehow
35:22 The dead man, right of center, randomly opens his mouth. You know you noticed it, too
yes he also closes partially his eyes.
I love this channel, but the first story has been solved, but I don't think it was very well announced. In case you haven't heard, it was an avalanche. I think Answers With Joe did a story on it.
I thought it was disproven in this video
@@torleah it was a long time ago, but they just came back with new research and evidence and it was proven to be an avalanche. Lemme find a link
ua-cam.com/video/mh0KDq4PlJQ/v-deo.html
It was not an avalanche.
The hikers had decided to make camp on the snow covered mountain side. In order to have a flat space to pitch the tent, they dug snow off of the slanted mountain side until they had a small flat area.
At some point before the hike, the tent had been modified to include a portable stove, which would keep the inhabitants of the tent comfortably warm.
After pitching the tent, the hikers retired into the tent and went to sleep. In the middle of the night, a specific known type of snow movement (I dismember the name of this phenomenon), but which has rarely happened, caused some volume of snow to slide off the snow base immediately above the tent, and fall directly onto the tent, crushing it to the ground.
This event caused immediate pandemonium inside the tent. In their panic, they cut open the tent fabric, and emerged into the great outdoors, clad only in what they had been wearing while sleeping, which wasn't much.
In their panic, they fled downhill towards the treeline in slightly different trajectories, and then died in slightly different ways.
The tent had been covered with too much snow for the hikers to clear off, and it had a large slit in the side. Therefore, the hikers could not go back upslope to recover the tent into a life saving shelter, nor could they recover their clothing from the tent interior.
After that, all of the supposedly odd deaths were simply the results of insufficiently dressed people trying different ways to save themselves from cold, and ultimately failing.
I wish I had kept the link, but I am certain that anyone could google it, and locate the article. It is a truly fascinating event that has kept me wondering for decades!
A channel called LEMINO also did a good video on this incident and also concluded that it may have been an unfortunate accident caused by the hikers…..
She was killed with a candle? I bet it was Professor Plum, or Col. Mustard.
I don't understand why the hikers weren't sleeping in more clothing just in case they needed to run from the campsite.
I see why the "You" in the title is capitalized, since that second mystery seems to have been solved. XD
Very good job fellows!! Congratulations y'all. Pertaining to the hikers. During my tenure in the Marines, I've personally witnessed delirium from dehydration in the cold, underestimating the need for hydration in the cold. Does it say anything about the biggest toxic spill in New Palestine Ohio dudes?
11:18
Perhaps, the tent was crowded and the hikers were feeling greatly inconvenienced by this. Then either someone got irritable about it and a fight started, or someone tried something (or was accused of trying something) with one of the girls and a fight started-causing someone to freak out and pull a knife. Somewhere along the way, the tent was cut and everyone panicked and ran out.
That theory is just as likely as the rest. 🤷🏻♂️
Research the "Isle Royale Anomaly".
3:08 how come the snow didn't cover their tracks? I Know this is just animation but it represents what they've really found. So it's seems they've been dead for a long time which means the snow would've covered the footsteps 👣.. that's why I don't trust these BS stories..
You're right I can't solve the Dyatlov Pass incident because scientists beat me to it a discovered that a slab avalanche caused it.
That's just a theory
I love simple history great stuff dude
About Smith's death, I think both Holmes and Brady were responsible for offing Smith indirectly
I love this. Channel.
What is is the price? And isn’t a telegram from ww1
@@fynnott8479 it’s a scam bot that spams the same message on a lot of comments. Just ignore it.
@@MegaMackintosh shut up
33:03 this story has got to be about the passengers suffocating because of all the smoke the two locomotives produce in the tunnel.
Have a great weekend everyone!
Lol he said the hikers were hitch hiking
2:04
The guy who got the knee and joint pain was lucky
Doesn’t sound like case number 2 is unsolved to me whatsoever…
Henry be like "Oops , older bro just died 'accidently', gotta go be king now lol"
Hikers: I think some or all of them went crazy either due to dehydration or eating tainted food like wild mushrooms (or tainted food cans). Then either hallucinated or tried to run from someone going crazy/turning on each other. The removal of clothes etc can actually paradoxically be a symptom of hypothermia, so could happen after they were forced to run away.
could the wounds from the hiking not be from falling off the trees with broken branches
William the 2nd was throwing up bunny 🐰 ears 👂 gang signs laying on that bed 😆 🤣 😂
I'm always early when I watch Simple History's new videos and I LIKE IT!
Anyone who has watched The Usual Suspects knows who was behind all of these mysteries. If you know, you know 😂
Jose Cuervo?
@@Billy_Bad_Ass 😂
Dr Evil…
Kaiser Sose.
Why does he keep saying hitch hikers? They were just garden variety hikers.
How did they not catch "HitchHiking" while QC'ing there story. Big blunder there. You would think the speaker would have caught his own mistake while reading this story...
14:50 Lol, pretty sure they didn't have "databases" back then. Pretty sure they compared prints manually by hand from an archive of finger prints, so a LOT harder to find a match.
00:35 they weren’t hitch hiking.
This is a brilliant article. Should the subject matter interest you, a closely related book is highly recommended. "The Silent Bridge: Echoes of the Unspoken Past" by Emma Wick
Could the Blackout Ripper be connected to Jack the Ripper? Or the possibility that that same killer lived all the way into ww2?
1.- The hikers found out something that they shouldn't be seeing and the Soviet Army rounded them up and made it look like accidental deaths, the ones who died by impact of their skulls were killed by beatings with the buth of a rifle.
i can't solve 2nd mistery because it's already solved, or what?
The hikers obviously met Bigfoot.
Everytime I think about the Rogelio Roxas's claim of the gold, I think about Whitebeard saying" THE ONE PIECE IS REAL!"
Bruh cuz
Never thought I'd see simple history cover histories mysteries
you didn't mention when Robert got Normandy and his younger brother got England at the time Normandy was considered a much greater treasure
I wonder if it could have been a bear with the hikers in Russia? Like the tent was crushed and ripped up so maybe it attacked the tent and they all scattered and then got lost in the dark snowy area for too long and froze. Maybe they were underdressed to keep their gear from getting sweaty for the next day. If you've ever hiked or camped out like that you want to be sure to keep your gear dry or it's easy to get too cold and since their tent was way too small for the amount of people they had maybe they decided to strip and keep warm with skin contact instead of all pack in in their gear and risk sweating in their gear. It would explain why they didn't have a chance to get gear on
Good video
I'd wager Yamashita's gold mostly went to Ferdinand Marcos.
At 46:00 is that Arnold?
I don't think you can dismiss the avalanche theory so easy. It fits much more than anything else. And considdering how they probably acted, I'm voting for avalanche or massive snowfall. More possible than secret Soviet bombs. I love oogabooga myths too, but let's talk about this rationally.
New research suggest an untimed slab avalanche but the researchers never claimed not to have solved the mystery and there is still missing prices of the story but i agree w u 100%
It's more likely that they "thought" an avalanche was coming.
@@fantasy_4772 That sounds reasonable if you think about it. Could explain the person who tried climbing the tree. They probably did so to avoid being buried.
@@bjsfishingaddiction1581 ye it dos sound reasonable but if u use it as a source mby mention that they them self never claim to have sloved it?
*considering
i think that hikers got crazy one by one
Possibility that the area they were camping in was intentionally targeted with radiation, they panicked started going crazy and bam.
They all died from being hit by all the cars while hitchhiking in the Ural mountains! 😂
A job for Mystery Incorporated...well maybe not in current form.
Why would you climb a mountain that’s called “Dead Mountain?”
How was the train one a mystery that can’t be solved lol
The end stages of hypothermia, people become very heated. Hence, why many were found with clothes missing.
You would think that William II death could have been solved. You would they they could have identified the arrow or see how was missing one. You would think that everyone would have a unique set and a certain number of arrows.
The greatest mystery about the Dyatlov Pass mystery is how it even remained one. An avalanche by all regards
A known symptom of hyperthermia is the feeling of excessive heat leading the suffer to take off their clothes.
I think The hitchHikers Were Running away from a Large Snowstrom!
Cool but creepy
Dyatlov pass (or however you spell it) It's just another Soviet cover up, for them accidentally killing civilians, not that they cared, but it's just another cover up. It was clearly due to some type of radioactive or nuclear testing, or dumping waste. They died because of the government, I don't think that's much of a mystery. It is the only explanation. The Soviets were notorious for this type of crap, and Chernobyl didn't even have to happen. They could have evacuated everybody, instead, they doubled down and told everybody that everything was fine, and let them drop like flies.
Only 2 truly unsolved mysteries
Gordon Cummins was the Blackout Ripper
Lol hiking and hitch hiking are 2 very different things. They werent on a hitch hiking expedition in the Dyatlov pass. But good video though
Yamoshita could have made a deal for his life with all the buried gold
@36:21 “they concluded no one was truly responsible for what happened” basically the governments shabby way of avoiding accountability
I love this channel, but I have 2 (fairly obvious) notes…both regarding the title: a) you can’t call the episode “…Mysteries You Can’t Solve,” when you literally have the explanation(s) (the train case, which it was obviously carbon monoxide poisoning BEFORE you went ahead and actually STATED AS MUCH in the video itself; as well as the Smith murder case, which was more “successful witness tampering” than a “mystery”) and b) the word “CAN’T” should be capitalized in the title of the video, not the word “YOU.” Capitalizing “you” implies the mysteries CAN be solved, just not by any of us viewers; whereas if “can’t” were capitalized instead, it would imply the mysteries are too difficult/complex/etc. to be solved by anyone, with any resources, that they LITERALLY “cannot be solved” (for the argument as to why this assertion is “false” please refer back to point “a)” herein).
I don't know, I've heard that radioactivity is a common cause of death in young hitchhikers.
There was a new study in 2021 and a documentary called A Unknown Compelling Force revisited the hiker incident. They settled on a slab avalanche and a certain type of wind that was the most likli culprit
What's "likli"?
@@bjames86 poor guy, i can’t imagine going through life not able to function due to a spelling error.
@@JamesChenisKing that's not a simple spelling error. That's full on potato.
@@bjames86 you must be fun at parties.
The hikers.
Its from the last warmth the body has given so the tent has a hole.
A horror movie was made about Davlot Pass called Devil's Pass. I remember liking it, It does imply some crazy theories.
I loved that movie!
It turns out that one of the hikers was an imposter.
45:52 Realized he sounds like arnold’s narrator
I miss Lemmino 😔
Temperatures can cause hallucinations that's a possible explanation for dyatlov pass incident. (Hypothermia can cause confusion, tiredness, slurred speech, memory loss, lack of coordination, slowed circulation, slowed respiration, irritability during stage 2 of hypothermia these are likely symptoms, (It could be possible for hallucinations to appear somewhat rarely in cases theoretically), and slow brain function all of which support this theory.)
Forgot to mention it says they were missing clothes so they were probably insufficiently dressed causing the hypothermia as they slept
Blackout ripper: who’s fingerprints were on the candle??