10 Disturbing Mass Disappearances

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  • Опубліковано 2 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 578

  • @jasondutcher9179
    @jasondutcher9179 5 років тому +820

    "Most people go missing one at a time" will be the sentence I randomly say to strangers standing next to me this week, thank you sir.

    • @chipamos
      @chipamos 5 років тому +12

      And go missing in the light of day.

    • @Ed-tm6qm
      @Ed-tm6qm 5 років тому +13

      Hahaha! This made my day!

    • @zeta3usable
      @zeta3usable 5 років тому +10

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @sionk5909
      @sionk5909 5 років тому +7

      Yup keep your guard up😂😂

    • @marissabones
      @marissabones 5 років тому +8

      Absolutely BRILLIANT 🤣

  • @vickiejohnson30
    @vickiejohnson30 5 років тому +175

    The Roanoke colonies intermarried with the local tribes. It has been known for some time. The tribes have been interviewed several times over the years, but no one wants to believe them.

    • @cobden28whittehnam7
      @cobden28whittehnam7 5 років тому +15

      could this perhaps be confirmed bu genetic testing?

    • @zenfrodo
      @zenfrodo 5 років тому +14

      cobden28 whittehnam You have to have something to match the DNA to. If we don't have any records of the descendents of remaining family in England...well....

    • @bradfaught1695
      @bradfaught1695 5 років тому +13

      Yes this is solved in my mind due to the excavations on hatterious island and the recent dna cross matching. Yes their was a list of the inhabitants.

    • @chrisjanuarywilliamson2010
      @chrisjanuarywilliamson2010 4 роки тому +23

      Exactly ... No one wants to make it main stream bc that would take away the mystery and $.

    • @chrisjanuarywilliamson2010
      @chrisjanuarywilliamson2010 4 роки тому

      cobden28 whittehnam yes, it has been.

  • @ziggy8253
    @ziggy8253 5 років тому +151

    First, Top Ten Kidnappings. Now, this? You’re a ray of sunshine this week, Simon.

    • @Player_Review
      @Player_Review 5 років тому +2

      Spooky time Halloween goodness.

    • @ziggy8253
      @ziggy8253 5 років тому +1

      Player Review I like spooky/scary but not depressing.

    • @bigsexypartyboy
      @bigsexypartyboy 4 роки тому

      🎵But you're still my sunshine🎵

  • @tanyawade5197
    @tanyawade5197 5 років тому +83

    That one guy in the Dyatlov Pass incident, that had to go back due to ill health, dodged that horrible situation by a slim margin! I bet he was horrified by the loss of his friends & how close he came to being one of them😱. Such terrible things to happen to ppl😢. 🌈

    • @Mambaru
      @Mambaru 5 років тому +6

      Or he killed them all and this was a cover. I've seen enough movies

    • @malvoliomaximillian2001
      @malvoliomaximillian2001 5 років тому

      @@Mambaru why would he kill his own best friends tho?

  • @somewherewest2556
    @somewherewest2556 4 роки тому +17

    Plenty of interesting info left out about the lighthouse keepers. For instance, according to the keeper's log there was a great storm that occurred during which the keepers thought that they would perish and were greatly relieved when it finally passed. However, there was no storm at that time.

  • @nechemiashoub4059
    @nechemiashoub4059 5 років тому +65

    I love that you included the Yemenite kids. My (relative?) is of Yemen descent and his parents are European. He was adopted.

  • @KaiserMattTygore927
    @KaiserMattTygore927 5 років тому +209

    The Dylatov Pass incident is one of those few events that genuinely bother me.

    • @tchy7246
      @tchy7246 5 років тому +6

      SkyTech RTS check out the video by Lemmino

    • @devonboulden2496
      @devonboulden2496 5 років тому +7

      I'm bothered by Woodpecker Pass too. ;( Have you seen the natural geologic pillars knows as the "Manpupuner rock formations?" Stonehenge don't have nothin on these pillars. They are in the Ural Mountains too. As far as I can recall, they're not too far from Dylatov Pass.

    • @weirdscience8341
      @weirdscience8341 5 років тому +1

      Why its just s spetznas kill on command order they picked remote hickers then killed them to unify there unit in a secret they will never disclose the sas stab random people and make it look like a mugging for the same reason

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 5 років тому +30

      @@weirdscience8341 You believe strange things.

    • @stevenbenson9976
      @stevenbenson9976 4 роки тому +12

      The group had a portable wood stove that had accidental fires. The last pic shows that one of them had been burnt by it. The fire started, they cut their way out, the four that were crushed fell down the ice and when the water thawed it took the bodies down stream. The radiation was from the university they attended. The missing tongue was from wild life

  • @glenisterm
    @glenisterm 5 років тому +11

    I saw one program about Flight 19, which gave a very satisfying explanation. The flight was supposed to see one island, turn, and follow the length of another island. However if you missed that first island, you would see another pair of similar islands, but travelling the length of the second island would send you out into the Atlantic. This explains the compass comment, as the compass direction they were travelling along the second island would not match the expected direction. They then thought they were way off course and needed to travel east, when instead they were heading out to sea. Finally they would have all run out of fuel, crash landed on the ocean, then eventually drowned or died of hypothermia. No aliens needed.

  • @rodneykelly8768
    @rodneykelly8768 5 років тому +138

    On the subject of the Roanoke colony. The colony was the second on that site. The first had also vanished.

    • @christineparis5607
      @christineparis5607 5 років тому +12

      They starved to death...

    • @ryanf1425
      @ryanf1425 5 років тому +4

      No one asked you

    • @ryanf1425
      @ryanf1425 5 років тому +3

      Jk 😂

    • @marcellinechoisne5627
      @marcellinechoisne5627 5 років тому +4

      @@christineparis5607 probably..

    • @sionk5909
      @sionk5909 5 років тому +15

      @@christineparis5607 if so they would've found evidence of this sadly that's not the case. I would settle for the part where they diside to return back to England and their ship got sank killing them all!?
      I still can't get over the fact that so many people just disrepaird off the face of the earth just like that!!

  • @mitchm9440
    @mitchm9440 5 років тому +81

    The plane disappearances honestly terrify me . How does that happen with all the technology we have ?

    • @TotalRookie_LV
      @TotalRookie_LV 5 років тому +5

      Simple, actually - planes still are not tracked all the way, nor can they report their position, when over large bodies of water. However, this might change pretty soon by using satellites for communication. Why isn't it done already? Cost, obviously.

    • @thatguy4087
      @thatguy4087 5 років тому +6

      I disagree with some of the conclusions in this video a mass hypoxia event certainly does not explain tracking devices they could’ve only been turned off intentionally. Also that’s the answer to your question at least three tracking devices were manually shut off had this not been happened we certainly would’ve been able to track it plus a plane may be big but it’s tiny compared to the size of the Indian ocean

    • @sionk5909
      @sionk5909 5 років тому

      Just wrote a comment about the same thing befor i saw yours!
      It baffles me to know in this day and age how's that possible for a group of people to just vanished without a trace
      🤔

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 5 років тому +5

      The Pilot commited suicide and took everyone with him. Thats what happened.

    • @Kaimine08
      @Kaimine08 5 років тому +4

      @@TotalRookie_LV That's pretty much how it always is with Aviation. Things aren't done until there is a body count.
      As for what I think happened. I think it's a combination of events.
      1) The captain switched the cabin pressure off. Allowing pressurized air to seep out and outside air to seep in.
      2) The captain turns the transponder off. Civilian Radar looses track of it but Military Radar still picks it up. It makes an immediate turn.
      3) Everyone but the Captain gets knocked out and eventually dies of Hypoxia
      4) The captain flies the plane manually and flies towards the Indian Ocean. This theory is backed up by several things.
      a)The Sultan Ismail Airport picks up an unidentified aircraft atleast 4 times at altitudes of 31-33000 feet. If this were an autopilot, the flying would be more consistent on altitude.
      b) The aircraft's satellite comms send off a signal to INMARSAT.. It grants a sort of "handshake" between the service and the plane. It had multiple signals from the plane heading out towards the Indian Ocean based on mathematical formulas and logic (Since this wasn't technically intended to be used for tracking, but it can give a radial location of where it could potentially be. Then it just comes to logic and math to make the general idea where it is. The theory goes that the captain than just flew towards the Indian Ocean until he eventually ran out of gas, then crashed into the Indian Ocean. It's assumed that it dived in to reduce wreckage. Flaps have been located which may have been out and subsequently destroyed by overspeeding. It's quite possible that...we'll never find the plane. The plane definitely didn't blow up because there's no gas to ignite so...we're looking for a plane that may have gone down whole which would reduce the wreckage severely.
      I think they also searched his house and recovered his flight sims that showed a similar path and crash, but I can't seem to find that information so it may be a bogus claim.
      That's the theory I'm going with based solely on a vid done by FlightChannel. Check it out. It's pretty interesting.

  • @pushinkeys
    @pushinkeys 5 років тому +30

    Saw on expedition unknown that the military investigation into the Dyatlov Pass started weeks earlier than what was reported, they could’ve been pursued for being at the wrong place or some other “unfortunate training incident”

    • @newmanoutdoors1564
      @newmanoutdoors1564 5 років тому +3

      Saw that also .

    • @bgriffininsd
      @bgriffininsd 4 роки тому

      It was an unfortunate accident that hopefully others may learn from.

  • @JennFaeAge
    @JennFaeAge 5 років тому +29

    I'm glad you avoided some of the hyperbole around Mary Celeste, there are a lot of "facts" going around that are nothing more than artistic licence added to the story years after the discovery

  • @sarahblack3034
    @sarahblack3034 4 роки тому +8

    I love Simon. One of the very best UA-cam hosts out there.

  • @WickedPhase
    @WickedPhase 5 років тому +88

    Ah yes, who can forget the classic death sign, getting your tongue cut off, as a natural phenomenon caused by snow slabs, hurricanes or avalanches.

    • @jackiechristian9343
      @jackiechristian9343 5 років тому +9

      @@johnstock3282 Are you saying that "Tongue and cheek?"

    • @IIxXKILLXxII
      @IIxXKILLXxII 5 років тому +4

      Not to mention two of them where missing their eyes and the lady missing her tongue was also missing allot of facial tissue.

    • @planescaped
      @planescaped 4 роки тому +9

      @@IIxXKILLXxII Soft tissue of the face is usually the first thing that is eaten by bugs and carrion eaters.|
      Really all evidence points to their tent filling with smoke from their portable burner, likely due to a drunken mishap as they were drinking, and thinking their tent burned down, or was at least uninhabitable, tried to get to shelter of the woodline... and vastly underestimated how screwed they were.
      But aliens, Soviet conspiracies and Yeti's are more fun to believe.

    • @IIxXKILLXxII
      @IIxXKILLXxII 4 роки тому +3

      Soviet parachute mines makes more sense than their tent catching light as I've never read one report of their tent catching fire or being burnt from the inside in anyway. Lyudmila Alexandrovna Dubinina had internal bleeding from severe chest trauma and not to mention a piece of skull missing, her tongue and parts of facial tissue missing, Semyon Alekseevich Zolotaryov had severe chest trauma and was missing his eyes, Nikolai Vladimirovich Thibeaux-Brignolles had a major fatal skull injury, and there was traces of radiation on one or some of their clothing, there is no info on who had radiation.

    • @illbeyourstumbleine
      @illbeyourstumbleine 4 роки тому +5

      The tongue wasn't cut off, it was pulled out. Using brut force. Also the bodies were injured in the same way. Much more force than would happen in a a fall. That's why this case is so bizarre. A tongue that was cut out is one thing, a tongue that was literally pulled out is an entirely different story.
      It seems like if there was a fire inside of the tent that would be mentioned in the case files. Also why run so far over a small fire? Just doesn't make any sense to me.

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot 5 років тому +35

    I thought they found those five planes in the Gobi Desert. At least according to Steven Spielberg. And right now those pilots, they're chilling out with some stick aliens. 😂😂😂

    • @christineparis5607
      @christineparis5607 5 років тому +4

      And Richard Dreyfus.

    • @ladykoiwolfe
      @ladykoiwolfe 5 років тому +2

      All I know is...I don't trust Spielberg.

    • @scheherazadenoir5950
      @scheherazadenoir5950 5 років тому +1

      @@ladykoiwolfe
      🤣😂🤣🤣🤣🤣
      Me neither, why was he always tryin' to get us to think that aliens were going to be friendly?🤔
      Don't get me started on all the anal probing.😁

    • @annescholey6546
      @annescholey6546 4 роки тому

      La la la looo😆

  • @m0j0e97
    @m0j0e97 5 років тому +32

    Do one on 10 of the most secretive corporations.

    • @programSense
      @programSense 5 років тому +1

      How? I'd they're secretive what is there to research?

    • @m0j0e97
      @m0j0e97 5 років тому +4

      fer prz Intelligence agencies have security breaches all of the time. Once an organization gets big enough they have to leave a footprint of some kind.

    • @benallen7704
      @benallen7704 4 роки тому

      #1 Weyland-Yutani

    • @sektor710
      @sektor710 4 роки тому

      They did not reply, that means they hate all of us

  • @Ellie-ei9cj
    @Ellie-ei9cj 5 років тому +10

    Yayyy something to watch! Thanks for the upload!🤗😗

  • @skynyrdjesus
    @skynyrdjesus 5 років тому +10

    There's really nothing that mysterious about Dyatlov Pass or Flight 19. Lemmino has great videos on them where he goes into great detail on them, but basically at Dyatlov there was a fire in the tent and they froze to death after fleeing in the confusion, and Flight 19 was a training flight with mostly inexperienced rookies and a veteran instructor who had just been moved to that base. The instructor got confused about where they were, for whatever reason became convinced they were over the Florida keys, where he had been posted for years previously, and decided to fly east into the Atlantic rather than turn West, overriding his trainees who pointed out they were nowhere near the Florida keys. They all crashed and drowned because the guy in charge was a stubborn idiot, but not really a mystery

    • @nicolajrath1570
      @nicolajrath1570 4 роки тому

      I was about to write the exact same. His answers are some of the most plausible theories I've heard about the cases

    • @IkeFoxbrush
      @IkeFoxbrush 4 роки тому +2

      I just watched the Lemmino video about the Dyatlov Pass and left a lengthy comment about why this explanation does not seem plausible. In short, there were no signs of a fire in the tent and it would not have made any sense to walk away from it more than a few steps as they needed the tent and everything in it to survive. And since they were experienced hikers it seems very unlikely they all made such a foolish mistake and wander away in the freezing cold, in the middle of the night without most of their clothes on, in the hopes of finding "shelter" in the forest, just because their tent was filled with smoke.

    • @skynyrdjesus
      @skynyrdjesus 4 роки тому

      @@IkeFoxbrush While your conclusion does seem reasonable, there are a few holes in it. While the reports, at least to my knowledge, I don't speak Russian, contain any notes on signs of fire in the tent the home made stove is mentioned. The second and I think far more important point, despite being experienced hikers, most if not all of them were very intoxicated, and even if in their right minds they would know that abandoning their tent would mean death, waking up in the middle of the night surrounded by smoke and piss drunk is more than enough to panic even the most experienced mountaineer, and they weren't in the best position to make calm, rational decisions. While I understand the allure of this kind of thing being a mystery, when I first heard of it I was incredibly intrigued, but ignoring what is an incredibly logical and likely series of events just because the mystery of it makes it more interesting defeats the purpose of asking the question in the first place. Sometimes people do dumb things is a boring explanation, but it's also nearly always the correct one, and conspiracy theories are fun, but rarely hold any water.

  • @prudencepineapple9448
    @prudencepineapple9448 5 років тому +9

    Flight 19, the person leading the flight was known to be rather 'limited' in his knowledge. The others didn't want to overrule the commander until it was to late.

    • @bluesira
      @bluesira 4 роки тому +1

      I've heard this talked about with other flights before - there is an order of command, and even when the person in charge is making a bad decision, there is a lot of social pressure to carry out their orders, despite it putting people's live in danger. Very fascinating but also tragic.

  • @christophermerlot3366
    @christophermerlot3366 4 роки тому +17

    As someone who has been a copy editor and proofreader for over 20 years, I can ask everyone to please stop saying 'disoreitated.' It's disoriented.

    • @michaelstanko5896
      @michaelstanko5896 4 роки тому +2

      Christopher Merlot- British English pronounces it differently. Get over it lol.

    • @ashwilliams6080
      @ashwilliams6080 4 роки тому

      Because I before E except after C.

    • @deadpanfish
      @deadpanfish 4 роки тому +5

      You can't always do preventative damage control. Irregardless, I find your passion for correctness disorientating.

    • @baruchben-david4196
      @baruchben-david4196 4 роки тому

      It's a common and accepted word in the UK.
      Also, language is constantly changing. What was once a mortal sin often becomes common use. An example of this is, "ain't." Once considered wholly unacceptable, it is now found in dictionaries.

    • @ashwilliams6080
      @ashwilliams6080 4 роки тому +2

      @@deadpanfish LOL I see what you did there and I appreciate you for it!!!

  • @aSinisterKiid
    @aSinisterKiid 5 років тому +38

    Dyatlov pass has always fascinated me. And the most recent decision to re-examine it, but completely exclude and criminal possbility and only consider natural disasters - completely reinforces that the government had something to do with the original accident. Trying to say a Hurricane caused people to walk off naked and end up crushed and having your tongue ripped out all while being covered in radiation. Right. A hurricane did it. heh.

    • @adamlynch9153
      @adamlynch9153 5 років тому +1

      aSinisterKiid dude came back early because of “health problems”

    • @Nootcaase
      @Nootcaase 4 роки тому +2

      The latest theory is that there was basically a hurricane like wind that made the the temperature of the pass drop. It came in from the side of the tent door, and the tent started to collapse. Cut op the ten on that side to protect against the cold while attempting to fix the tent poles. They ran when the wind threatened to pull up the tent the wind died down just as suddenly as it hit and so the tent wasn't pulled up fully but it did collapse. By then they had all been out in the cold too long. The radiation on their bodies was due to the labs they worked in. Hiking after all was just a hobbies for them.

    • @aSinisterKiid
      @aSinisterKiid 4 роки тому +6

      @@Nootcaase Yeah Alex, I'd like "Things that didn't happen for 500 please"
      hahahaha. This wasn't just a hobby for them. They were an experienced trekking group. They were all Grade II hikers and upon return from this expedition would have gotten Grade 3 certification. None of that explains the skull fracture, the other 2 guys chest fractures. They didn't work in labs, they were students at university and friends of theirs. There was massive amounts of radiation found on ONE persons clothing. Not their bodies. One of them was missing her tongue, eyes, part of the lips and another one was missing both his Eyeballs. The fractures the ppl had were on a level you would suffer from a car accident. Theres so much more I could go into, trust me I have studied this extensively. That's why I made my original comment.

  • @suchanhachan
    @suchanhachan 5 років тому +11

    We have to be careful with facts sometimes, though. For example, in the Dyatlov Pass incident he says one of the bodies had had its tongue "ripped out". A more likely explanation is that a scavenging animal ate it...

    • @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
      @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley 5 років тому +1

      But the tongue and only the tongue? And only one person? You'd figure an animal that would do that, especially in an area so far north and so cold where food can be scarce, would be thrilled at a meal such as a human and would eat more...not just very specifically the tongue and the tongue of just one person.
      This said, I'm completely unfamiliar with the full story but considering nothing was said of animal foot prints being around the tents (I was thinking maybe they were chased out by a bear or something), I'm leaning more toward human foul play.

    • @bluesira
      @bluesira 4 роки тому

      @@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley 'But the tongue and only the tongue? And only one person?' Actually it was more than just the tongue, but this is the part that gets mentioned the most because it sounds the most sensational, and has the most connotations in a social context. (Cutting out another's tongue often being a retaliation for those who break silence agreements.)
      However, there were several bits of soft tissue which had been eaten, chewed on, or broken down when the bodies were found. As mentioned in the video, all of the bodies were not found at once, nor all together, so one or two people experienced more exposure to the elements than the others. Without going too far into the gory details, they were in various states of decay or had experienced different levels of deterioration.

    • @gloriamontgomery6900
      @gloriamontgomery6900 4 роки тому

      Thank you. Predatory animals tend to go after the most easily accessible parts-

  • @seonaelizabethcoster8465
    @seonaelizabethcoster8465 4 роки тому +6

    There is a really heartbreaking documentary on Netflix about the students from Iguala called "The 42".

  • @delCorteh
    @delCorteh 4 роки тому +6

    "Suspicious in Concert" would be an awesome band name

  • @earthwormscrawl
    @earthwormscrawl 3 роки тому +2

    He forgot to mention the lost Native American tribe known as the Fukarwe. Since they were a lost tribe, whenever they met anyone they would say: "W're The Fukarwe!" And the name just stuck.

  • @garbagefreak
    @garbagefreak 5 років тому +13

    Why is Dyatlov Pass on this list? They didn't disappear.
    Also, I'm surprised none of the disappeared military units of history made this list. E.g. the 9th Legion, the lost Persian army, the Nanking Battalion.

    • @aSinisterKiid
      @aSinisterKiid 5 років тому +2

      well if we want to be technical, at first they did disappear. They never showed up where they were supposed to. They were missing for almost a month before a search party was able to get to the site. And even then, only 5 bodies were found at first. 4 more people were still "missing" for 2 months before they found their bodies. So, yes in the end they didn't completely disappear. But for quite some time they did.

    • @KaosKrusher
      @KaosKrusher 5 років тому +1

      I was waiting for the 9th Legion too (didn't know the other 2)

  • @LadyWhinesalot
    @LadyWhinesalot 4 роки тому +10

    Re: The Yemenite Children Affair, article dated 24 December 2019 "The High Court of Justice on Tuesday instructed a district court to consider a lawsuit against the state and the Jewish Agency for Israel filed by Yemenite immigrants who say their children and siblings were taken from them by the authorities in the 1950s."

    • @llddau
      @llddau 4 роки тому

      Ganieda Morgan This is something I think I’ll try to find out more about. I’m confused as to why it would happen, and why specifically the Yemenites. Is it at all possible that they in particular treated children badly or something (or were thought to have)? I’m just trying to think of a reason to target them. The kind of bastards who just kidnap to traffic and sell kids would take from any community I should think. It’s also interesting that with all the Israel- and/or Jew-haters around, who will search for and bring up any imperfection real or imagined of the country and turn it into a story of monstrous proportion, that this is not something I’ve ever heard them scream about.

    • @mordechai-
      @mordechai- 4 роки тому

      @@llddau The reason is documented. The secular government of Israel separated the children from their Orthodox Yemenite parents to prevent them from growing up religious. The Israeli government at the time was socialist atheistic, and didn't want religious children growing up and increasing the number of Orthodox religious Jews in Israel.

  • @randallpetroelje3913
    @randallpetroelje3913 5 років тому +6

    Some of the cases I’ve heard of. The others are worthy of investigation. Thanks

  • @ladycharlenegrace8023
    @ladycharlenegrace8023 4 роки тому +5

    I've always heard that throughout time after the colony got ' lost' that there are natibe tribes on the coast with members manifesting blue eyes or blond hair& sometimes both. The only other tribe that didn't have brown eyes & black hair was a 7 foot tall variety that had hazel eyes brown hair.

  • @lucyk2371
    @lucyk2371 4 роки тому +5

    Dyatlov Pass I always thought it was an avalanche. You can hear it coming and people have often cut open tents trying to get out of the way. Also, it would cause the damage described to trees, etc.

  • @hughdanielson
    @hughdanielson 4 роки тому +5

    I thought the flight 19 mystery was solved a few years back and the plane wreckage was discovered. They were not on the gulf coast but had been blown to the Atlantic coast. They assumed their compasses were malfunctioning, when in fact they were working properly and flew even further off course as aresult.

  • @sp8118
    @sp8118 5 років тому +12

    I thought most of these have been explained in the last few years:
    Roanoke people were shown to have integrated to a local Indian tribe, proof of light hair and blue eyed people living with the northern tribe and European Dna intermixed with their lineage around that time.

    • @sionk5909
      @sionk5909 5 років тому

      Really...please! Said the bogus DNA testing which isn't accurate😂

  • @planescaped
    @planescaped 4 роки тому +9

    They know what happened to flight 19 though... the guy in charge f'd up royally and had them sail into the ocean, forgetting where they were geographically and thinking them in the gulf of Mexico.
    In trying to reach Florida they flew out into the Atlantic Ocean... Really the flight instructor's incompetence is as baffling as it is tragic.

  • @davidhoward437
    @davidhoward437 4 роки тому

    Your skepticism about the first case shows admirable integrity.

  • @zackmosbrucker1628
    @zackmosbrucker1628 5 років тому +3

    I knew Roanoke had to be number 1. An entire colony going missing definitely makes a top tier disappearance.

  • @captainmacmillan1752
    @captainmacmillan1752 5 років тому +5

    I havent watched the video yet but the Dyatlov pass incident must be high on the list.

    • @13Wolfie13
      @13Wolfie13 5 років тому

      See, it shocked me that the Dyatlov Pass Incident was even on this list because none of those people disappeared. Every body was accounted for. But you read the title of the top 10 mass disappearances and without watching the video, immediately thought of Dyatlov Pass. I read the title and thought about Roanoke and the Mary Celeste. I feel like I must have a different definition of disappearance than y'all.

  • @ooloncolluphid7904
    @ooloncolluphid7904 5 років тому +15

    The pilots of Flight 19 were NOT experienced. It was a TRAINING misson lead by one seasoned veteran. Imagine all of them having to ditch in high seas...

    • @christineparis5607
      @christineparis5607 5 років тому +6

      People, even professionals, make mistakes....its awful, but happens more than I thought. I recently read a book about complicated guilt and grief, and there were many examples of smart, intelligent people who just made a mistake, and it caused deaths. You should read this book called "Deep Survival, who lives, who dies and why". Its an incredible study of how our brain feed us information and how we react to various situations. So much of the time we are making repetitive progress, doing the same thing over and over. It's when a change occurs that mistakes are made. Usually, nothing happens and we do not even notice the fact that something terrible could have just happened. Every day though, people make the mistake that kills them and others. Driving is a perfect example, but there are thousands we never think of...

    • @viktorkolaric4156
      @viktorkolaric4156 5 років тому +4

      Yeah, and the instructor was recently relocated, the best and most logical explenation is that he simply misidentified his position, i dont remember all the details but part of the coastline he previously ran drils in looks very similar to another part of the coast near where the flight was that day, only in the first case flying in a straight line would eventually take you to the shore where in this case the same direction sent you straight into the open sea.

    • @ooloncolluphid7904
      @ooloncolluphid7904 5 років тому

      @@viktorkolaric4156 Yep. People INVENT mysteries out of anything.

    • @ooloncolluphid7904
      @ooloncolluphid7904 5 років тому

      @@viktorkolaric4156 Yup. By the time he could have corrected course they were almost out of fuel, so...
      But people prefer mystery over logic. Thanks a lot, Berlitz.

  • @renatacantore-gross8842
    @renatacantore-gross8842 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you for another most fascinating video.

  • @domenickrathof984
    @domenickrathof984 5 років тому +18

    I am 35 seconds in and I'm calling that Roanoke Colony (or however it's spelled) is on here

    • @freddymars2014
      @freddymars2014 4 роки тому +1

      Wow! You must be psychic! No one would ever have guessed that! 🙄

  • @HEATRACER24
    @HEATRACER24 5 років тому +2

    This is my favorite youtube channel!

  • @ClareAngel78
    @ClareAngel78 4 роки тому +1

    I have always found stories like this fascinating 🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀

  • @pikmaniac2643
    @pikmaniac2643 4 роки тому +1

    If I recall correctly, the most likely reasoning behind the Dyatlov Pass actually involves a geologically induced weather phenomenon that causes hurricane-force winds to whip up. The students, thinking there was an avalanche, rushed to escape, and ran for a nearby forest. The ones that didn't make it to the ravine died of exposure, while the ones that did suffocated when a temporary snow-fort collapsed on them. Some were burned due to losing consciousness by a makeshift fire. Take this with a grain of salt though, as my memory shouldn't be adequate supporting evidence. (I think it was a channel called "Bedtime Stories" that suggested the theory in a second episode dedicated to the incident.)

  • @flickchick710
    @flickchick710 2 роки тому

    The Sodder children story has always stuck with me because even though I'm from Alabama my mom and her family are from West Virginia and lived quite near the town the Sodders were from and my mom told me about seeing the billboard they had up for decades

  • @marco77ar
    @marco77ar 4 роки тому

    There are always Simon videos, that I have yet to see, new to me.

  • @MikeJBeebe
    @MikeJBeebe 4 роки тому +1

    I'm surprised you missed this one: the Lost Children of Hamlin. The written history of Hamlin starts in ~1,200AD with the line, "It has been 100 years since our children vanished". The legend of the Pied Piper springs from this incident. To this day, it's not known what happened to the children in the year 1100, but something traumatic enough to have been recorded in the town history and etched in stained glass back in 1300 must have taken place. There was an eyewitness account written by a woman in ~1125, but it vanished in the 1700s.

    • @gloriamontgomery6900
      @gloriamontgomery6900 4 роки тому

      There is an interesting theory about that. The government wanted to attract settlers to some land they had set aside. They sent colorfully dressed speakers to rave about the new land and get people to agree to go. The proof of this is a sudden influx of Hamelin area names that appear in the records of this new territory. The children would more than likely have been young people, young couples, rather than actual children

  • @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
    @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley 5 років тому +2

    Number 2 with the kids going "missing" in Mexico is why I can have sympathy for our immigration issue here and can't just make a blanket comment of "arrive here legally" when the legal process takes forever but what lies behind is a very dangerous situation.
    Imagine our own government in the U.S. just making 43 people go "missing" all at once and not caring to look into it. Or the provided answers are unsatisfactory. For me, it's unimaginable...and I'm aware I'm extremely fortunate to be able to say that, to at least have the privilage of being able to trust my government enough that they wouldn't silence their own citizens in such a way. I'd already heard of this story before this video but I'd also heard of the thousands more kidnapped by gangs and killed or girls sold into slavery. There's a coalition of mothers looking for their children, unearthing graves to help bring each other closure. They know they're likely dead...they just want a body. Again, something I find unfathomable here in the U.S. I'm very fortunate...but many others are not.

  • @RizztrainingOrder
    @RizztrainingOrder 4 роки тому +1

    Me: if you are in distress carve something in a tree!
    Villagers: carve where we’re going into that tree there!
    Me: sees tree, “where did they go!? It’s a mystery!”

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 3 роки тому +1

    Flight 19 was lead by a pilot who had been reprimanded several times for his navigational shortcomings. This has been known from that day. The, unknown causes, declaration can be assumed to have been to protect senior officers' incompetence.

  • @treborironwolfe978
    @treborironwolfe978 5 років тому +9

    The Lighthouse: You didn't include the diary entries and the evidence found while inspecting the lighthouse, such as one or more men's rainsuits still hanging on the hooks as if no need for them.

    • @ruthmeow4262
      @ruthmeow4262 5 років тому

      The diary entries were believed to have been added to the story when a pulp magazine in America re-told the story. One raincoat was still in the lighthouse, as Simon said the lighthouse had protocols that it not be left unmanned. Not mentioned is the speculation that a giant rouge wave hit (as wave damage was found) and the one keeper inside saw it coming and ran out to warn the others, not taking the time to put on his raincoat.

    • @treborironwolfe978
      @treborironwolfe978 5 років тому

      @@ruthmeow4262 I could certainly be wrong here, but even during this time, industrial/military "rain coats" also provided some basic "life jacket" functionality such as preserving body temperature and also basic floatation assistance. I'm more inclined to believe that the 3 men got bored and wandered around the island just before the storm approached... they discovered some psychoactive agents through fungi, microbial taint, or some odd ocean critters they caught. If one is trusted to obtain the lighthouse, I think it's safe to say they would instinctively grab their raincoat in those conditions if they were not intoxicated.

    • @aidangriffin7892
      @aidangriffin7892 4 роки тому +1

      I read something that a rogue wave could have been responsible for the disappearance of the lighthouse keepers, which makes sense as rogue waves appear out of nowhere, which could have surprised the men and could have swept them into the ocean.

    • @bluesira
      @bluesira 4 роки тому

      @@ruthmeow4262 'Not mentioned is the speculation that a giant rogue wave hit (as wave damage was found) and the one keeper inside saw it coming and ran out to warn the others, not taking the time to put on his raincoat.' - Perhaps the video was edited later, but isn't this exactly the explanation proposed in the video? So it absolutely got mentioned.

  • @GigawingsVideo
    @GigawingsVideo 5 років тому +2

    What kind of mentality people have at that time giving away hundreds of children without even feeling of guilt? I know people can be monster sometimes but this is too organized involving a big number of people including director, nurses and many more.

    • @petergray2712
      @petergray2712 5 років тому +1

      It's called racism. Ashkenazi Jews are mostly from Poland and the various components of the Tsarist Russia/Soviet Union. They were insular, marginalized and often subject to systemic oppression and violent attack. And they internalized the endemic racism of their native countries, especially the white supremacist ideology of 19th century Europe. When they migrated to Palestine, they consciously tried to maintain their European identity, and imposed a racial hierarchy reminiscent of other settler states. The Yemeni Jews were Mizrahis, Diaspora Jews of primarily Middle Eastern ancestry... in others brown, poor and alien. The reasoning was that allowing the Mizrahi to keep their children, it would dilute Israel's European heritage, and thus they were given to Ashkenazi families to correct their defects.

    • @GigawingsVideo
      @GigawingsVideo 5 років тому

      @@petergray2712 So there's racism even among Jews themselves. This is Hutu vs Tutsi all over again.

  • @MrEsMysteriesMagicks
    @MrEsMysteriesMagicks 5 років тому +6

    Number 11 on this list would be all the girlfriends I've ever had, although to be fair, they all disappeared one-by-one and there weren't really enough of them to qualify even as a collective mass disappearance. Sure has left me baffled where they all went, though.

    • @gregbrockway4452
      @gregbrockway4452 5 років тому +1

      Does anyone remember that song by Guns n Roses “I used to love her”? Sorry Mr. E but that was the first thing I thought of while reading your comment.

    • @MrEsMysteriesMagicks
      @MrEsMysteriesMagicks 5 років тому +1

      @@gregbrockway4452 That's a vile song about murder by an equally vile "musical" group. If that's the first thing you thought of, even after reading the last line, then maybe your local law enforcement authorities should know about you.

    • @charlesseymour1482
      @charlesseymour1482 5 років тому

      I hear you on that. You are most likely in touch with her Mom.

    • @azuradawn5683
      @azuradawn5683 5 років тому +1

      @@MrEsMysteriesMagicks You can dislike GnR, but to act like they aren't legitimate musicians? That's pretty ridiculous. Also given that your comment could easily be read as implying that you've murdered your exes, I'm not sure how you're in any place to judge someone for thinking about a song lol.

    • @briancrawford8751
      @briancrawford8751 4 роки тому

      @@MrEsMysteriesMagicks You're "One In A Million," Mr. E.

  • @gking8945
    @gking8945 4 роки тому +7

    Whooooaaa totally did NOT think Roanoake would be on this list 🙄

  • @sallyjambo5316
    @sallyjambo5316 4 роки тому +1

    Love 💕 this guy

  • @sionk5909
    @sionk5909 5 років тому +7

    I remember hearing about the Malaysian airline and the disappearance of all the crew and passengers and thinking what the hell!!, How did that happen?
    In this day and age with all the technology we have in our disposal...then how the hell can a group of people just disrepaird off the face of the earth without a trace!?
    Its like these people never exist
    As Simon would say its not one person that disrepair but a whole group of people. Weird isn't it?

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf 5 років тому +1

      Yes its weird. And some countries lost billions of dollars searching for the airplane until they give up

    • @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
      @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley 5 років тому +1

      If they've not been able to find the wreck and everyone was strapped into their seat, that can prevent bodies from floating up. You'd at least expect for them to find luggage or something though...

    • @AvoidTheCadaver
      @AvoidTheCadaver 5 років тому +1

      There's some news about the pilot about how he was suffering extreme depression and deliberately took the plane down with him. It's not the first time such a thing has happened

    • @sionk5909
      @sionk5909 5 років тому +1

      @@AvoidTheCadaver Could be, but still doesn't explain where all the people and the plane is?!

    • @AvoidTheCadaver
      @AvoidTheCadaver 5 років тому +1

      @@sionk5909
      The Indian ocean is VERY big. deliberately plowing a plane into it is going to render it into very small pieces. Literal needle in a haystack

  • @mollympls
    @mollympls 5 років тому +9

    There is a lot of new evidence about the pilot of Flight 370 that strongly indicates suicide. It is the most likely answer. He plotted out the route on his flight simulator at home. 60 Minutes Australia has a recent video on this.

    • @eleanorgreywolfe5142
      @eleanorgreywolfe5142 4 роки тому

      It's a little confusing why he chose such a method for suicide though, especially since it means he took innocent lives with him.

    • @owenshebbeare2999
      @owenshebbeare2999 3 роки тому

      @@eleanorgreywolfe5142 That method of suicide has happened before and, assuming that he did commit suicide or intend to, his method was unusual, as it did include deliberate course change/s rather than the more common (but still rare) simple act of a catastrophic dive.

  • @oppaloopa3698
    @oppaloopa3698 3 роки тому +2

    The Roanoke colony assimilated into the local tribes. England abandoned them, they became friends, they became family.
    There’s evidence of blue eyed, light haired, and light skinned descendants of the tribe. Honestly the only reason it’s not accepted if cause of racism.

  • @Robert-xp4ii
    @Robert-xp4ii 4 роки тому +4

    I'm fairly sure the 5 planes out of Pensacola were found. Planes of that type and era were found within close proximity to each other, per a documentary. Maybe they couldn't 100% confirm it though. ?

    • @johnhardin4358
      @johnhardin4358 4 роки тому

      As I recall, there was such a find, but the numbers did not match up to flight 19. If they are not Flight 19, then what loss do they represent? Surely that could be determined. So far, nothing further. The area is hard to navigate because of the key geography. Also, this is in the area of undefined events. Those old timers were most likely war veterans and knew their business. However, ye fighter pilots must be young. I am reminded of the young spartan who stood in formation until the fox under his jerkin killed him. An older man would have preferred the punishment. Their flight leader made the best decision he could, and not without contention, but obedient anyway. So they sailed into the drink, loyal to the last. The combination of events likely perfect stormed them. All hail the heros and RIP. Their great generation has passed to our great loss.

  • @rme5596
    @rme5596 3 роки тому +2

    Went missing in Mexico 😱. No way!

  • @icedtea649
    @icedtea649 4 роки тому +6

    Dear Mr. Writer, "disorientate" is not a word.

  • @vernicethompson4825
    @vernicethompson4825 4 роки тому

    My personal theory about the Lost Colony of Roanoke involves hurricanes. The area is prone to being struck head on by powerful storms, and one of these storms could have frightened the colonists into abandoning the island. But the waters around the island would have been equally dangerous, and so most of them were probably lost in their attempt to evacuate.

  • @adonis8293
    @adonis8293 5 років тому +1

    Do one on historical suicides

  • @aerongray2228
    @aerongray2228 5 років тому +1

    Roanoke is not really a mystery. They were known to be low on food, did not leave the agreed "duress" sign but did have time/ability to write the name of the nearby native tribe who were known to be friendly and helpful. nobody checked with this tribe to see if they were there, and this tribe was later documented to have white-appearing members. its as big a mystery as "who pooped in the litter tray? I have a cat but she is asleep now"

  • @gregfrith5058
    @gregfrith5058 3 роки тому

    I was hoping the Franklin Expedition of 1845 would be on here... bummer. Interesting video nonetheless!

  • @ladykoiwolfe
    @ladykoiwolfe 5 років тому

    That village that disappeared, it's not the only one. But it's more odd that the dogs were left behind. From what I've learned, most villages that disappear take everything with them.

  • @shotforshot5983
    @shotforshot5983 4 роки тому

    The mystery of Flight 370 haunts me. I suggest reading about Helios flight 522.

  • @livecool.diecool
    @livecool.diecool 5 років тому +3

    So the children heard a strange noise on the roof on Christmas morning, then were never heard from again?

  • @epizzle9232
    @epizzle9232 5 років тому +2

    The dyatlov pass incident is so intriguing! What are your theories about what caused them to leave their tent?

    • @joemcdougall7079
      @joemcdougall7079 4 роки тому

      Hypothermia turns u crazy, so many stories of people with hypothermia stripping down and running out of their tent

    • @trollsports7829
      @trollsports7829 3 роки тому

      @@joemcdougall7079 from my experience hypothermia eats up your energy and doesnt really make you run around

  • @arcady0
    @arcady0 4 роки тому

    Well we can scratch Roanoke off the list now. Apparently Archaeologists have more or less known for a very long time that the colonists simply joined the local Native Croatoan tribe.

  • @TheMarilyndmiller2
    @TheMarilyndmiller2 4 роки тому +1

    The students of Iguala, a few of the theories stretched the bounds of reality and imagination...It seems as though authorities came up with an explanation and set about making the facts fit that explanation.

  • @david_vs_a_word
    @david_vs_a_word 5 років тому +1

    I remember watching documentaries about flight 19 back in the day, and it had interesting theories, weirdest part was the time jumps plane's that were at one place then another, but they say triangle has been debunked, but what people dont understand about the triangle is that, it's a natural but unnatural things happen there if you understand me, strong magnetix the currents just in general it's a weird place.

    • @KaosKrusher
      @KaosKrusher 5 років тому

      statistics show that there are no more dissapearances in the Bermuda Triangle than anywhere else ... assurance companies don't even charge more for going in the Triangle so that must be saying something

  • @ronaldwhite1730
    @ronaldwhite1730 3 роки тому

    thank - you .

  • @leethomas4247
    @leethomas4247 5 років тому +2

    These are interesting but I wonder how many other times 3 or more disappeared that aren't so well known

    • @christineparis5607
      @christineparis5607 5 років тому +1

      Over 900,000 people disappear every year in the US alone. Most are children and young people, most are never found. That is an unbelievably frightening number. Just imagine if an entire grade school full of kids just vanished, every week...

    • @azuradawn5683
      @azuradawn5683 5 років тому +1

      @@christineparis5607 "Most are never found" is inaccurate. The vast majority of disappearances/missing people are solved within hours.

    • @christineparis5607
      @christineparis5607 5 років тому

      @@azuradawn5683
      According to the missing and unidentified persons system (namus) around 650,000 people are reported missing every year, and of those around 3,000 are never found. My numbers were from a US Government statistics poll from a few years ago and way off. The numbers will change from year to year. I still believe that that 3,000 missing people is incredibly high, but better that a million!!! Thank you for pointing that out, I will try to find more accurate information, and check it more often.

    • @azuradawn5683
      @azuradawn5683 5 років тому +1

      @@christineparis5607 Omg-a person on the internet admitting to being wrong?! Wow! I'm incredibly impressed - seriously. You could so easily have come at me shouting and instead you looked it up... wow. I super appreciate that. And yes - 3000 missing people is 3000 too many! Hopefully as technology continues to improve and mental healthcare becomes more accessible, that number will go down..

  • @joeye1772
    @joeye1772 4 роки тому

    The Sodder children case is super dodgy. The fire service didn’t show up until the fire had burnt out despite being a few miles away, there was an insurance salesman days prior who threatened that the children and house would go up in smoke because of comments against Mussolini, a phone line had been deliberately cut almost 5m off the ground, both of the family’s trucks stopped working on the night, a hasty inquest into the cause of the fire (on the jury of which the insurance salesman, who was never questioned, served) said it was faulty wiring but members of the family remember the lights being on during the fire, and the fire chief (? or maybe police chief) admitted to leaving fake remains at the site to convince the family the children had died. They were 100% kidnapped and a lot of people knew what happened and helped cover it up.

  • @Dang3rMouSe
    @Dang3rMouSe 5 років тому +3

    My grandfather was 1 of the lead Navy researchers on the Flight 19 incident

  • @jamesdreads7828
    @jamesdreads7828 4 роки тому

    every day of the week except sunday,....

  • @vladdracul7810
    @vladdracul7810 4 роки тому +1

    Am I the only one that remembers flight 19 being found a few years ago?

  • @nicholassudov2299
    @nicholassudov2299 3 роки тому +1

    Like. But the Dyatlov case is a mass death, not a mass disappearance.

  • @josi4251
    @josi4251 4 роки тому +1

    The Lost Colony wasn't lost. John White knew where they went, and his personal papers indicate this. Archaeological digs have found English items on Hatteras Island, and the local inhabitants started showing up with blue eyes and English surnames. DNA tests would prove this beyond doubt. They were never lost; John White simply never saw them again, and an incorrect legend took flight.

  • @qcfrs
    @qcfrs 5 років тому +1

    They did a documentary on the the Dyatlov Pass incendent. I think it was called the Russian Yeti?

    • @bluesira
      @bluesira 4 роки тому

      ...I don't think that sounds like a documentary.

  • @scythebergon418
    @scythebergon418 2 роки тому

    Before this video I was showed a ad for the mask... Yes that's the mask with Jim Carrey. What year is it lol? Also 2022 still going strong hope to see more years of amazing content

  • @MrWolfheart111
    @MrWolfheart111 4 роки тому +1

    1000 tons of alcohol on a ship... hmm wonder what could have happened... lol

    • @owenshebbeare2999
      @owenshebbeare2999 3 роки тому

      Denatured wood alcohol, pretty much undrinkable, and reports were the cargo was secure.

  • @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958
    @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958 5 років тому

    Flight 19, the five avenger torpedo bombers in the Bermuda Triangle story is not an unusual event. A treasure hunter actually found a group of five avengers all sunk together off the Florida coast and thought he'd found the missing planes until tail numbers revealed they were a different set of five identical planes. Further research revealed that over 150 avenger torpedo bombers were lost out of naval air station Fort Lauderdale during WW2. They took kids with just a couple of hours instructions on the ground and sent them off flying with one inexperienced "instructor" per group. The excessive losses were accepted as part of the war effort. Totally crazy way of training, but this is America.

  • @nickycat101
    @nickycat101 5 років тому +4

    The day the plane disappeared I was watching the Dr. Who episode where a plane goes into a time vortex and vanishes. It totally freaked me out.

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 3 роки тому

    The leader of flight 19 had been investigated having failed basic navigation. He went east when he reported going west. He then went away from his radio direction finder indicated, believing he was over the Gulf. His commanding officers, who appointed he who was such a disaster, covered their asses and pretended a mystery.

  • @Rainy..Day.
    @Rainy..Day. 5 років тому +3

    How can one tell if a tent was ripped from the inside or out???

    • @kasnitch
      @kasnitch 5 років тому +4

      I think the direction of the stretched fibres and whether the torn fabric is predominantly on the in or outside might help ?

    • @stevencorey1278
      @stevencorey1278 5 років тому +1

      Because Simon says...? BWAHAHA!

    • @Rainy..Day.
      @Rainy..Day. 5 років тому +1

      @ I can tell if a glass window was broken from the outside or the inside. (That's actually kind of easy.) I have tents and I have torn them both from the outside and the inside and I couldn't tell a difference in the cuts. I know I am no expert nor a forensic investigator, but I was seriously interested in knowing how someone can tell the difference.

    • @Rainy..Day.
      @Rainy..Day. 5 років тому +1

      @@kasnitch thank you. I have tents and have cut them several times. It kinda just happens at times while camping. But to me the cuts all just pretty much look the same. Tho I'm no expert...

    • @car998
      @car998 5 років тому +3

      When cutting a fabric with force the first hit pushes the threads out, and leaves something like a indent. The last movement is when you pull the knife out of the fabric which should pull some thread in with the blade.

  • @ill-fatedgamer
    @ill-fatedgamer 4 роки тому

    I'm pretty sure i seen a doc a few years back where divers found flight 19

  • @LadyWhinesalot
    @LadyWhinesalot 4 роки тому

    Strange anomalies in the discovery of the Village at Lake Anjikunihe. Joe Labelle states that he found a pot of stewed caribou that had grown mouldy yet the temperature was sub-zero. Mouldy does not happen at sub-zero temperatures. His account also mentions sealskin garments but they used Cariboo, not sealskin

    • @aidangriffin7892
      @aidangriffin7892 4 роки тому

      The fact that there is only one source about this village makes it almost certainly false.

  • @BowlcutBadman
    @BowlcutBadman 5 років тому +4

    Flight 19 went missing above the Bermuda Triangle...

  • @amandajones661
    @amandajones661 3 роки тому

    I was born on Virginia Dare's birthday! 🤗💙

  • @alveirtus1501
    @alveirtus1501 2 роки тому

    Thank you for talking about the missing Yemenite Children! The administration of Netanyahu tried to shed some light on it.

  • @rayg6497
    @rayg6497 3 роки тому +1

    The Dylatov Pass incident wasn't a mass disappearance. The bodies were found. The cause of their deaths are still unknown, but they didn't disappear. Should be replaced on the list with the Anasazi or the Mississippians who just seemed to walk away from their homes.

  • @TheRealDarthRevan
    @TheRealDarthRevan 5 років тому +1

    How'd I know that Rowanoke would be on here

  • @writerpatrick
    @writerpatrick 5 років тому +1

    Much of the time when planes hit the water they break up. If they're intact it's because a pilot was able to control the decent safely enough to make a water landing. But four of the five lost squadron pilots were novices and many not have been able to land successfully.
    I heard one theory about Roanoake that they were trying to reach a fort which was planned for a year after the colonists settled. The plans for the fort were scrapped but they had no knowledge of that. By now any evidence of where they went or their remains would be lost. Even native settlements of that time are hard to find because most of the materials used were organic and didn't survive.

    • @vernicethompson4825
      @vernicethompson4825 4 роки тому

      Especially because of destruction by hurricanes, which is my personal theory about the colony.

  • @stavrosgazis5824
    @stavrosgazis5824 5 років тому +1

    David Paulides comes to mind

  • @tommynaglingniq1145
    @tommynaglingniq1145 4 роки тому

    Inuit, he's talking about my people

  • @annescholey6546
    @annescholey6546 4 роки тому

    The 1945 flight is part of Close Encounters by Spielberg 1977.

  • @Marti_Zebra
    @Marti_Zebra 4 роки тому

    One of the pictures shown when talking about the missing mexican students has nothing to do with it... It is a graffiti that reads "vivos los llevaron, vivos los queremos, solidaridad con los 43 estudiantes desaparecidos" (that is to say "taken alive, alive we want them, solidarity with the 43 missing students") next to a Uruguayan flag. This graffiti makes reference to the 43 students who went missing during the last military dictatorship said country suffered up until 35 years ago... Apart from that, nice video, cheers from uruguay

  • @billcipher599
    @billcipher599 3 роки тому

    2:20 Yule man vibes

  • @cynicalbadger7012
    @cynicalbadger7012 5 років тому +5

    First from Ireland (probably)

  • @annegrey3780
    @annegrey3780 4 роки тому

    While I don't say this lightly in Canada at least about 4000 children disappeared in residential schools (which ran up to the 1990s). We don't actually know how many disappeared for sure because records weren't often kept, but I believe as it stands now it's 2000 dead and somewhere between 4,000 and 20,000 missing. It did occur over a period of time though and not all at once. But again I don't say it lightly just to get it on some list I say it because as shameful as I personally find it it's an aspect of history that can't be overlooked.