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The Dyatlav Pass Incident. As a Cryptozologist, I have to go with the Almastay theory. Russian Bigfoot. I still want to believe that Anastasia survived. Despite the evidence saying otherwise. And I must point out that many of these answers are just theories. People around the planet still debate on who built Stonehenge & for what purpose. That being said? I truly did enjoy watching your video.
@@immortalsofar5314 LMFAO "Baldrick, you wouldn't recognise a subtle plan if it painted itself purple and danced naked on a harpsicord singing 'subtle plans are here again'."
The Roanoke colony mystery is so stupid. "Hm all the colonists are missing and wrote the name of a local tribe which is now partly populated by people who clearly have Caucasian ancestry. We'll never know what happened."
Or they just disappeared into the ocean...unless a wreck as large of the Titanic happens under the right conditions to preserve it....very easily the ocean will swallow all evidence
no its not. we assume logically thats what happened. we'll never know for a fact plus imagine being gone for 3 years and coming back to find your whole colony gone. he did even get the chance to look for them.
@@blackdragon6thanks for the clarification because i dont think they said it in this video (unless i missed it)z i was going to say wtf thats so messed up. Like the other commenter said. Probably still not enough time but makes more sense now
See this is what I'm talking about...this person is charged w 4 counts of murder..gets like 6-7 years, but a girl who robbed an ATM gets 14 years mandatory!!!.....wtf!!??!!??
@@christianromero6604the American "injustice system" is absolutely ridiculous! Alot of murderers get out of jail early, as do rapists and other people that have committed horrible acts, and people who have done crimes no where near as horrible as rape or murder, alot of the times, get far longer sentences. It's not justice, especially for murderers who get out of jail after serving part of their sentences for "good behavior"! They should not be let go early for that. No one should get time off for good behavior, because you are supposed to be on your best behavior in jail, it should be a given!
I think it’s a stretch to call all of these “solved”. Some of them were definitely solved, and there is clear evidence confirming the answer, but several of them just have good possible theories that fit the evidence to one degree or another but can’t really be proven.
The Umbrella Man was not a good explanation. It's doubtful that 1960's Texans would understand a protest against Neville Chamberland. More likely sun protection.
Richard Jewel honestly deserves the BIGGEST apology and settlement from the FBI/ government... they intentionally doxxed Richard, who was the actual hero of the story not the villian, and absolutely DESTROYED his life and nearly convinced him to unalive himself, then made him a punchline. Thank you, Richard, for doing what you did and being responsible for saving untold number of lives. You ARE a worthy hero, sir. 🙏
@@VioletJoy UA-cam tends to censor many people and delete their comments if the algorithm's no-no word is picked, I've been riddled with the same problem.
I saw the bombing happen live on tv as a kid, up late over the summer. I remember the scathing press. I'm so glad he was exonerated. It was good for me to see at that age that the press and law enforcement can be wrong and how important it is to consider all the facts, think critically, and not just take what others say as the truth.
@@notagamer1898 yeah, all of the original season are basically on every free streaming service now... i gotta watch them, they used to scare the shit outta me as a kid
Aw man. The Mary Celeste mystery has been one of my favorites since I was a kid. I got all excited to hear it had been solved, but you just gave another theory without any proof. Thanks for getting my hopes up, Mojo!
STAY EXCITED these noggins know NOTHING . If alcohol had soaked the boards it would be evident ,its unsolved as are 90 % of these . Mars they are lying about everyone knows that , Zodiac just cos one cipher was PARTIALLY broken still leaves 2 more & no name . Mary Celeste is unsolved m8 keep on dreaming cos this lot are clickbaitig bullsh*tters
The Mary Celeste was built about 30mins from where my family lives, And it was apparently cursed from the getgo....the very first captain didn't even make it out of the harbour before he died...
I was wondering the same thing, apparently the guy was more or less just an accomplice, the two guys who died were the main perpetrators. I understand these countdown style videos have to be brief, but that was a pretty important detail to leave out. People are freaking out all over the comment section.
@@anthonylarosa1155 Possibly. I vaguely remember watching a Dateline episode about the case, I don't remember how much we KNOW about exactly what happened, but the point is he didn't go to prison for murder, as this video suggests. He pled guilty as an accessory to murder.
Writing I'll Be Gone In The Dark emotionally destroyed Michelle McNamara and she passed away from an accidental drug overdose before she could finish the book. Her widower, the comedian Patton Oswalt, made sure her book was completed and published. In the book, McNamara said about herself, "There's a scream permanently lodged in my throat now." When Michelle McNamara died, she had a daughter who was only 7 years old. Michelle's book became huge, but I'm sure a lot of her readers were surprised to learn that she had worked herself to death.
@WynnWynn-gl3fk They may have been secretly getting a divorce by thar point if he was unable to live with someone who was addicted to drugs. Either that or he mat have quickly remarried because he wanted his daughter to grow up with a mom figure. If you're suggesting that he killed his wife, then you're just being a dick and shame on you.
@sadem1045 yes!!! Anyone who has seen his interviews and heard through folks in his life speak of how he was around this time know he didn't harm her.
"Only 9 of 11 bodies were found, Anastasia's body was missing" "Oh, turns out one of those bodies were her so mystery solved" Ummmm....what about the real 2 missing bodies?!
It appears that the Red Army soldiers who killed the Romanovs tried two burn two of the bodies, presumably the two smallest and therefor possibly the two youngest. It takes a long time to burn even the bodies of two teenagers on an open fire outside at night. The dawn was approaching and so was the "White" Army. The mineshaft with the remains of the Tsar, Tsarina, three of their daughters and four other adults were found in 1979 and excavated in 1991 after the fall of Communism in Russia. The bodies in the mineshaft included the skeletal remains of four adult males, two middle-aged females, and three young adult females. One of the four adult males in the mine shaft appeared to be the same age and build as the Tsar and in 1998, his nuclear DNA was found to be a match to that of other male members of the Romanov family. The skull lined up with photos of the Tsar. One of the two middle-aged females in the mine shaft was the right age and build for the Tsarina, and had the same mitochondrial DNA as female descendants of Queen Victoria who was the Tsarina's grandmother. The remains of three young adult females found in the mineshaft were also Queen Victoria mitochondrial descendants and had DNA that was distinct from each other but in all three cases a total overlap with the DNA of the remains identified as the Tsar and also with those remains identified as those of the Tsarina. So those three bodies in the mineshaft were of three of the daughters. Missing from the mine shaft were the Tsarevich Alexi and one of his sisters. In 2007, the burn site was located about 100 meters from the mine shaft where the other nine bodies were found. The two sets of burned bones in the fire pit were found to be of an adolescent male who was a Romanov male AND a Queen Victoria mitochondrial descendant. That could only have been of Alexi. The other set of remains was of another adolescent/young adult female who was a DNA match to the parents and a Queen Victoria mitochondrial descendant, therefor, she was the fourth sister. The two older sisters were conclusively identified as Titania and Olga from their ages, height and other identifying marks on their skeletal remains but there is debate and disagreement among experts over which set of remains are those of Anastasia and which are those of her older sister Marie. Irrespective of which sister's body was burned with Alexi, four sets of remains accounting for all four sisters have been identified as Romanov daughters. Unless some independently identified samples of either girl's DNA are found somewhere else, the specific identity of the two sets of remains will continue to be a mystery.
The person who did not have any sort of DNA match to the remains of the Romanov family was the woman identifying herself as "Anna Anderson" who claimed to be Anastasia and who sued the surviving Romanov family in Berlin and in the US in an attempt to claim some share of the Romanov family fortune. In 1994, her DNA from a tissue sample that was removed from her during surgery was found not to match the mitochondrial DNA of Prince Philip, the Queen's husband, who was a maternal great-nephew of the Tsarina. Anna Anderson's DNA was found to be a match to that of the family of Franziska Schanzkowska, a Polish armaments worker with mental health issues. The Tsarina's brother, Grand Duke Ernest Louis of Hesse, who had lost two of his four sisters to the Bolsheviks, hired a private detective who identified "Anna Anderson" as Franziska Shanzkowska in 1927. Those of us who were rooting for her to be the lost Grand Duchess were dealt a shock when her remains did not match those of the Russian royal family.
The other remains in the mine shaft were those of Anna Stepanovna Demidova, the Tsarina's lady-in-waiting, the Tsar's personal physician, Eugene Sergeyevich Botkin, the family's chef, Ivan Mikhailovich Kharitonov, and a Latvian footman, Aloise "Alexei" Yegorovich Trupp. All of these people, God bless them, volunteered to stay with the Romanov family in their exile and were executed with the family by the Bolsheviks on July 17, 1918.
Same with the Dingo case. People are so quick to blame the parent (In truth, it is often them) that they refuse to do even the most basic investigation. And then the prosecutors and police crow to anyone who will listen about how hard they work to protect children. Just like so many laws and ways of thinking, if someone says something 'is for the children' , it almost never really is...
@@melissagrant4178 The 'Dingo Ate My Baby' case. Her name is Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton. Her life was ruined because people didn't think a wild dog could snatch and eat a defenseless baby. There are still a ton of people that believe she killed her baby.
@@melissagrant4178 It took them decades to find and piece together the evidence to definitively decide that yes, Dingoes did indeed eat her baby. It's a ridiculous (and tragic) story all around.
While the murder of Jun Lin is certainly upsetting, it was only an “unsolved mystery” for a few days. Less than a week later they had identified his murderer and a few days after that they had the bastard in custody. It doesn’t feel like it belongs here alongside the Somerton Man and the Zodiac’s cypher.
A decent number of these entries aren’t solved, but you guys just gave researchers best guess(es) and what they believe. I like WatchMojo, but this was disappointing.
The McStay family murder was so tragic, I remember seeing the picture of a family looking like them going across into Mexico and had a little hope until their bodies were found and to think that his so called business partner could murder his friend along with not just his wife but to also murder the small kids….just a horrible sad tragedy!
I remember in the initial coverage him saying, “oh i was Definitely the last person they saw…” & being like, “welp, sounds like he knows whats up.” Ugh. What a creep!
Once again Mojo is playing fast and loose with the truth. In this case the words "Finally Solved". Let me fix the title for you.. "Top 30 creepiest Mysteries , some of which have been solved, others are still just theories about what happened" not elegant, but at least not a clickbait lie(which Mojo does more often than not)
@@chrisscanlan1533 Yeah, I also take issue with their use of "finally." Even their number 1 pick was solved quickly. And if they're going to feature creepy criminal cases, that should be its own thing, which I would also watch. I'd rather they had focused on the "took forever to solve" criminal cases rather than just deciding "vampires are creepy let's throw that in the mix to rile people out."
didn't you hear the mystery of the pyramids is now solved, using water to pull the blocks. No time has been spent demonstrating this first hand and we've made no effort supporting this theory, but great news people, this mystery is solved.
Re Patricia Stallings: Instead of "It was later discovered", I wish you had credited William Sly, M.D., and James Shoemaker, M.D., Ph.D. of Saint Louis University who saw the episode of Unsolved Mysteries featuring Patricia, tested Ryan's blood and proved his mother's innocence.
the stones of stonehenge are sourced from multiple places, just few days ago it was publish in nature that one of the central altar stones is all the way from scotland
I'm glad they finally identified The Somerton Man. BTW, if you've heard the case of The Boy in the Box, he's also been identified! His name was Joseph Augustus Zarelli.
That was underwhelming to me. So he just happened to die out of the blue and he was a gambler. I remember watching other UA-cam videos about different theories. He was a spy, etc. They never really said how or why he died, did they? Will have to go back and listen again.
@@PennylovesRomeo This video is one of the best on the subject of the Somerton Man…It gives you a great deal of detail about the case…There are many other videos on how the mystery was finally solved!….Ive posted the link for you below this post!
Small footnote to the Franklin Finds. The Erebus and Terror were found EXACTLY where the local first nations had told researchers to look for generations. Odd little bit of bookending history given that the crews didn't listen to the locals in the first place and refused to wear proper clothing and had been warned to stock up on rosehips, neither of which they did.
I lived in the N.W.T for decades and travelled to Nunavut often. The locals i knew would laugh that the researchers never listened them. When they did the researchers took all the credit. Typical
Still waiting on Jon-Bennet and the vogurt shop murders to be solved. That shop was right by my house when I lived in Austin. I would stop by and leave a rock on the marker, one for each girl. RIP all you poor children. RIP. You have not been fogotten.
Um.... it's not really accurate to include a few of these. A mystery that is solved within a few weeks at most isn't a huge mystery that "FINALLY" gt solved. Nothing should really be on this list that took anything less than a full decade or more to solve. Stuff that was figured out in a few weeks like Jamal's embassy murder really don't count in this context.
I remember when Eric Rudolph was on the run. There were rumors that he was hiding in the woods not far from where I lived and sure enough he was found in Murphy NC, which is about 45 miles from me. I remember seeing bumper stickers on people’s cars that read”Eric Rudolph hide and seek champion 1996-2003”.
These were all cool to learn about. I'm hoping one day they'll figure out the true identities of Jack the Ripper and D.B. Cooper. And what happened to the Sodder children, who the Vilisca Axe Muderer and the Watcher were, and just so many more unsolved mysteries.
I was surprised Cooper wasn't in this video, because it's pretty well established who he was. Somebody found microscopic hybrid metal shavings in his tie that were produced by a company that built airframes for Boeing. He was an employee of that company, but he died back about 2001.
The Dyatlov Pass Incident had so many strange theories around the deaths of the hikers. What's even _stranger_ is how they came to the conclusion that it was an avalanche: To digitally simulate the avalanche and snowfall, they used animated technology and coding... from Disney's Frozen. The head of the simulation lab saw Frozen, was impressed with how the snow looked and behaved, called Disney up for the code and made their own simulated avalanche. They found that, yes indeed, even a small avalanche could cause the injuries seen on the hikers, such as broken ribs. Hypothermia caused 'paradoxical undressing', which explained why some of the hikers were found improperly dressed for the cold.
Also, while avalanches were uncommon in that area, they could still happen. If I remember correctly, all signs even pointed to the risk being higher at just that time. Poor people.
I saw a a review which convincingly debunked the avalanche theory, which does not account for all the observations, such as eyes and tongue missing from one of the girls (local Mantsi people ascribe this phenomenon as the work of dangerous Bigfoot type creatures in the area), why some froze to death while their tent was intact, while they fled in sub zero temperatures without footwear etc. An avalanche also does not explain the high levels of radiation encountered at the scene.
Yeah there were. Nazis used them. Ejection seats were literally patented in the 20s and made during WW2. Talking out of your ass is fun, but even Ace Ventura did some investigating and research, maybe try it once in a while.
that dont matter to clickbaiters Zodiac = Unsolved Mary Celeste= biggest loada crap ive ever heard YOU CAN SMELL & see alcohol it actually preserves marine wood . Pyramids ( LOL ) you are spot on these aircraft did not have ejection capabilities as jumping from a prop plane that is not designed for it is probably gonna killl you .
"Australia's Somerton Man mystery may have been solved". It has been solved, via DNA. It didn't immediately go public because the authorities told his family first.
@@Michelle-s4z If I'm remembering correctly, I believe he was also in dire health straits anyway, due to a life of alcoholism destroying his liver ...kind of ...winding down. Poor dear.
That Roanoke story...can you imagine coming home after years and finding a note saying where everyone went and declaring it a mystery instead of going and checking 🙄 kinda declaws a lot of history's mysteries....maybe the people were just stupid.
What? Lol. John white was gone like 4 years. They weren't familiar with the area and they did try to cross the pamlico sound but it was fruitless. This was the 1580s, not 1980s lol. Croatoan could've meant so many things at that time.
As far as I know, White tried to travel over to Croatoan immediately. But neither the weather nor the crew agreed with him. So he had to travel back to England whether he wanted to or not.
17:28 'Close Encounters' was such a great film. Unpopular opinion maybe, but I think it's one of Spielberg's best, right up there with Lincoln, Schindler's List, & The Colour Purple.
The stones also didn't all come from a nearby forest as claimed in this video, in the past few weeks it's been discovered that at least the middle horizontal stone came from North Scotland. Going by the comments there are a lot of inaccuracies in this video in general.
It is also how. Like the comment above noted, a huge stone is from Scotland. So it is how (how did they move and erect those giant stones) and why (for what purpose)?
How they hell can a murderer of 4 serve only 38 months of a 10 year sentence?! The 10 years would have been no where near enough to begin with, 38 months is abhorrent, that is not justice.
I’m surprised there aren’t more people in the comments screaming about #1. How Heather managed to not even get charged is so far beyond the bounds of logic. I can’t imagine that outcome occurring today!
@@brianarbenz1329lol right? 😂 Like, do you not believe her or have more information she was in on it or what? Enlighten us then lol. Regardless, why she wasn’t charged was addressed
@@a1ntcry1noveru I don't believe or disbelieve her. I leave that judgement to the grand jury. They heard all the evidence. They did not hear a few seconds about her on a UA-cam, then issue an impetuous verdict on their keyboard.
@@brianarbenz1329 I'm not saying you specifically lol, these were more rhetorical questions addressed to the OP. I responded to you because I agreed with you and then wanted to add my own two cents lol. I too have no idea what the grand jury heard. So the statement that its beyond the bounds of logic is a strong one without any additional evidence or explanation as to why the grand jury decided the way they did or what the girl did
@@SharonEllis-ze6hsI live in a small town a few minutes from Springfield. I found out about this sad case thanks to a bill board outside Bass Pro shop in 2020. I truly hope there is a solution while the family still lives.
I read a scary book called "beneath the dark ice" that included the roanoke colony mystery. Its nice to know they probably just integrated into the native population rather than beng terrified by, then eaten by a colossal squid type creature posessing the semi-shapeshifting abilities of some actual octopi and a disturbing intelligence that again, some real giant squid seem to possess (to a degree)
What's even more cool about the burial site of Richard III, he was buried underneath car parking spot R. as in his literal initial was marking his resting place and no one knew! Mad! Although when it comes to Stonehenge there is actually more information about that. Some of the stones come from Wiltshire, some from South West Wales, and the altar stone was identified last week that it comes from the north of Scotland, so its even more mysterious now!
The fact this video features CBC News (10:55), 'The 5th Estate' (18:47) & 'The Nature of Things' (24:15) made me realize WatchMojo is Canadian. I should've known from the narrator's accent, but when it's the accent you hear every day sometimes you don't notice when you're hearing it. Hi from Ontario 🍁🍁🍁
I always suspected Stonehenge’s stones were from Wales or Scotland--that’s one mystery out of the way. But the bigger fish to fry is Stonehenge’s purpose; like the number of licks needed to reach a Tootsie Pop’s center, the world may never know. Edit: Before someone says the stones aren’t from Wales, that’s why I also suggested Scotland as a possibility.
Best theory I've heard is some kind of long scale calendar/clock, like the stones are aligned with the Earth's rotation and sun cycle, so they could tell by the placement of shadows what time of year it was.
Recent research suggests they come from all 3. The upright stones from Marlborough Downs area in England, the smaller blue stones from southwest Wales and the altar stone from Scotland.
I am REALLY surprised by #1. So it took police a few weeks to solve a murder. That hardly counts as a "long unsolved mystery." By that criteria, half the murders in history should be on this list.
Actually I believe so. It's very sad but lots of debris has been recovered on the east coast of Africa and the most dominant theory is that sadly the pilot (or another crew member) used the plane to 'unalive' himself and took the rest of the plane down with him. I can't find the source now, but apparently it was the immediate rumour amongs Malaysia airline staff too, but understandably they kept it quiet... There's some updates online...
If there are aliens theyvare too far away to get here. Also, it's a big if. People think, "The universe is to big to not have other intelligent life" but people don't understand how unbelievably lucky we were to evolve into intelligent life, a huge number of massively lucky things went our way. The odds of this combination happening again is spectacularly unlikely.
😮 Space is a mystery, but a mystery that has other life forms somewhere. Just because we were lucky to evolve into intelligent life. Who's to say that on other plantets, whatever forms of life were intelligent to begin with and didn't have to wait to evolve into it. Now with the invention of cell phones people are finally seeing that the sky is full of intelligent life. They have to be, to be around. The government knew and now we do and have the proof on our camera's. President Reagan said he saw one when he was at a gathering. He happened to look at the right time. He said he was captivated and a little scared. Of course he was president at the time and had to make it top secret. The people with him couldn't tell either. After that he was constantly looking upward but never saw one personally again. He already knew about top secret things going on. When he was no longer president he told about what he personally saw. Of course the government knew he was getting dementia, so of course they made it sound like that was the President's health problem. Regan saw what he saw many years before. I believe him. You just can't dismiss his claim.👽🌎🪐📡🔭🛸
They continued to study the geology of the stones and have since discovered stones from Wales and Scotland at Stonehenge which leads anthropologists to believe this was an important centre for many more people than initially thought as well as showing that early peoples travelled and mixed far more than was previously considered. Really interesting.
This is the first time I’ve heard there was a Croatoan island. That completely changes that story. It’s always been told to me like Croatoan was some random word and we couldn’t figure out what it means. That totally changes the story.
Regarding John Franklin, if you're interested, look up John Rae. He was another 19th Century explorer who found out what happened to Franklin's expedition. This included suggestions the crew were forced into cannibalism. But when he reported that the Victorian society was horrified and he was ostracized, thanks partly to Franklin's widow who did everything she could to glorify her husband's expedition and none other than Charles Dickens who reported that Rae's findings were wrong. Society chose to believe any cannibalism must've been at the hands of the local tribes and Rae fell into relative obscurity. He was finally proven right in the 20th century.
At the 9:26 mark, the Russian Dyatlov Pass mystery is a favorite of mine. Sad that 9 experienced hikers had such a tragic ending. Growing up some of my favorite TV shows were UNSOLVED MYSTERIES, IN SEARCH OF and THE MYSTERIOUS WORLD OF ARTHUR C. CLARKE.
Stick to US & Clarke m8 i wouldnt believe a word these mojo noggins said they messed up half of these - Evem Stonehenge which was worldwide news last week
The Dyatlov Pass Incident - I love how this site just glosses over facts that *disprove* whatever point they are making. Since when does an avalanche pull out one person's eyes and another's tongue? Their bodies were also found in unnatural positions . . . an avalanche. Right.
@@cheriem432 Even an attack by Martians looks more plausible than the avalanche. I don't even know where to begin with the list of things that don't fit. I actually think Rakitin's version is very close to what actually happened, maybe with some inaccuracies. Explains all the weird things pretty well.
The Dyatlov Pass has always given me chills since the first time I saw the episode on History's greatest mysteries. I was hoping for aliens or a yeti to be the answer. *sigh* (RIP to the hikers
I was sure you were going to put 'Lindy Chamberlain' in the #1 spot. She was the woman who was mistakenly convicted and imprisoned for 3 years in Australia after, she claimed, a dingo took her 9 week old baby out of their tent whilst camping in Uluru in 1980. In 1986, her daughter's jacket was found in a dingo lair, tested and determined to be the daughter's and Lindy was subsequently freed. On the subject of babies, you could also have included the Lindbergh baby kidnapping in 1932.
An avalanche doesn't explain why the hikers didn't show external signs of injury, why some were found wearing the clothes from the dead, or why their bodies had been irradiated
Tbey did have injuries, they scavenged the dead, the radiation was explained in the area they were in. None of the "spooky" nonsence is mentioned in the original incident report and was added later.
Even an attack by Martians looks more plausible than the avalanche. I don't even know where to begin with the list of things that don't fit. I actually think Rakitin's version is very close to what actually happened, maybe with some inaccuracies. Explains all the weird things pretty well.
@@Yutah1981 from what I heard when that "explanation" came out it was one of many possibilities but given it has no one to blame that's what the government declared happened. But it definitely doesn't explain enough, especially not the "and now we know about the snowmen" line from the diary
The irradiated part can be explained by how the clothes were stored afterward. They weren't really careful where they stored them. That's one hypothesis I can actually believe. Also explains it in a logical way. Wearing others clothes: some survived the avalanche and they needed more clothes. Simple. First one I cannot answer though. Can no longer remember if that one was actually true or not.
@@Elora445 1) the injuries they had excluded being able to walk so far away or survive. 2) there were NO traces of said avalanche or snow it should have brought, the tent was lying on top of the snow, and it doesn't explain why they didn't take any things or why they didn't return to take them. 3) their footprints were seen, and they indicated they were walking away, not running. The guy who was found with the most severe injuries had been walking alone. I think it's pretty obvious someone made them leave. Rakitin's version is the best ones and it explains everything from irradiation to the injuries.
An avalanche does NOT really explain Dyatlov pass. They found many footprints leading from the tent. Some women were missing their eyes, and one her tongue. A man was 16 feet up a tree, and they all had massive internal wounds. Unless you didn't explain shit, avalanche makes no sense.
This should be called "Top 30 Creepiest Mysteries That now Have Additional Theories Which May or May Not be Accurate, but We Don't Really Know, Because They are Still Creepy Unsolved Mysteries and Your Guess is as Good as Mine."
#21 An Avalanche still doesn't explain the radiation burns and the missing tongues and eyes. And the fact that each hiker had completely different injuries from one another.
the missing tongues and eyes were scavenged by wildlife. they didn't have radiation burns, just traces of radiation on their clothing which is explained by the low levels of environmental radiation due to a prior nuclear accident nearby. and their different injuries stem from the fact that they fled in different directions - some got hit by the avalanche (the blunt force trauma injuries), some just got disoriented and died of hypothermia.
Well... Tongues and eyes are easy, that's due to scavengers... they go for the soft orifices first. It's the same thing happening in 'alien' cattle mutilations. Radiation burns from environmental factors aren't so unusual when you read how frequent and lackadaisical Russia was with her nuclear tests, among other scary shite: Their bio-weapon experiments and 'mistakes' are the stuff of nightmares.
@@dietotaku Just for the sake of argument, name one scavenger that feeds ONLY on eyes and tongues, but leaves open wounds untouched and also leaves no claw or teeth marks, beak impressions tracks or feathers. And if I remember correctly , only one of the hikers was missing their eyes and tongue and only one had radiation burns.
I can't imagine the misery and outrage of losing your child, only to be falsely accused of his murder and prevented from attending his funeral. The state is rarely your friend.
The umbrella man in the assassination of the former president could also have had a skin condition where the sun was like "HA! I HAVE YOUR PALE ASS IN MY SIGHTS!!!"
In reference to the 1996 US Olympics bombing a security officer was falsely accused because he was attempting to warn people about the danger and to get away from the area. How was he thanked? By being the number one suspect accused of the crime until thank God he was cleared. The takeaway I got from that was if you are the first to report anything you will be the first to be the number one suspect and accuse until hopefully your innocent name is cleared. .... If you're lucky.
Sad what someone can go through when authorities had no leads to turn to and I back the blue!!! But they are not flawless and do make mistakes at times
@@lisagibson2975yes and the women who blamed him her family & colleagues want compassion given to her memory as she just made a mistake..I was like wait a minute she accused a innocent man who was a hero of doing this...People still brand him as the "falsely accused/formerly believed bomber" Nah she can also be branded with the title of "falsely accused"
@@TriViuM2k22 Many mysteries remain unsolved but still, there are experts and scientists who claim to have solved them but, they give some bulls*÷° of an explanation. Like just about everyone I know believes to have had an encounter with a Ghost or even Ghosts but, those scientists give their own OPINIONS and yet, most of us believe in Ghosts but the scientists refuse accept anything Supernatural.
This is so Trippy!!! I remember when I first heard about the Original Night Stalker. Back in 2007. Never did I dream after researching him for years that he got his start in Visalia! I've been living here on and off since I was 3! And that he lived in Exeter and worked as a Policeman. In my last job I used to drive through Exeter Monday through Friday. And seeing that Water Tower with its name on it on this video. Wow! I was OBSESSED with this case! I read all the books on it. Saw all the early documentaries on it. I even joined a Proboards page, that was dedicated to finding him! I was on that board from 2013 till he was caught. Ironically he is now only 34 minutes away from me in Corcoran prison!
it's a mathematical certainty that there is life somewhere else in the universe. whether it's intelligent, capable of making contact with us, or even carbon-based is another question entirely.
What do you make of these answers? Let us know in the comments below!
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He was first 🏅
@@Dad-Says-Jokes no you weren't and a pinned comment doesn't count
The Dyatlav Pass Incident. As a Cryptozologist, I have to go with the Almastay theory. Russian Bigfoot. I still want to believe that Anastasia survived. Despite the evidence saying otherwise. And I must point out that many of these answers are just theories. People around the planet still debate on who built Stonehenge & for what purpose. That being said? I truly did enjoy watching your video.
@@Reaperguy67 @bobthedopeman7327 is mentioning you again in his connection.
Lies! People are not going to believe these simple answers at all. These answers are outrageous!
He murdered 4 people and got 38 month let out on good behavior. WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH OUR JUSTICE SYSTEM?!
Everything is wrong with the system.
Exactly what I was thinking. 4 lives and arson that wasn't solved for 20 years and people serve more time for drug charges!
@@djholliday5132People serve more time for shop lifting lunch meat. Those girls were raped and tortured and glassbowl walked in 3 years.
That had nothing on him I assume. It just said he plead guilty which was probably a plea bargain to get someone to admit so they can close a case.
That punishment was so wrong. WRONG!!
You can still hear King Richard's ghostly refrain:
"They paved my gravesite
And put up a parking lot."
Mmm bop bop bop
@@angelacooper8973 lol, sorry for that terrible joke - couldn't help myself. 😁
Ha! Good one! 😂
"Really Baldrick, a car park? That was your cunning plan???"
@@immortalsofar5314 LMFAO
"Baldrick, you wouldn't recognise a subtle plan if it painted itself purple and danced naked on a harpsicord singing 'subtle plans are here again'."
The Roanoke colony mystery is so stupid. "Hm all the colonists are missing and wrote the name of a local tribe which is now partly populated by people who clearly have Caucasian ancestry. We'll never know what happened."
Exactly! Even as a kid hearing this "mystery" I was like "Ummmm...you just said CROATON was found!" Stupidest mystery ever.
I always thought Roanoke was an overrated mystery. Same goes for Dyatlov Pass.
I thought it was an odd mystery to begin with
Or they just disappeared into the ocean...unless a wreck as large of the Titanic happens under the right conditions to preserve it....very easily the ocean will swallow all evidence
no its not. we assume logically thats what happened. we'll never know for a fact plus imagine being gone for 3 years and coming back to find your whole colony gone. he did even get the chance to look for them.
The Freeman arson really 4 counts of murder and this guy gets 10 years and ONLY stays in prison for less than 4 years? That's messed up.
Apparently the people that did the actual killing died and he was more or less a glorified accomplice.
@@blackdragon6 ok, still not enough time, but at least that makes a little more sense!
@@blackdragon6thanks for the clarification because i dont think they said it in this video (unless i missed it)z i was going to say wtf thats so messed up. Like the other commenter said. Probably still not enough time but makes more sense now
See this is what I'm talking about...this person is charged w 4 counts of murder..gets like 6-7 years, but a girl who robbed an ATM gets 14 years mandatory!!!.....wtf!!??!!??
@@christianromero6604the American "injustice system" is absolutely ridiculous! Alot of murderers get out of jail early, as do rapists and other people that have committed horrible acts, and people who have done crimes no where near as horrible as rape or murder, alot of the times, get far longer sentences. It's not justice, especially for murderers who get out of jail after serving part of their sentences for "good behavior"! They should not be let go early for that. No one should get time off for good behavior, because you are supposed to be on your best behavior in jail, it should be a given!
I think it’s a stretch to call all of these “solved”. Some of them were definitely solved, and there is clear evidence confirming the answer, but several of them just have good possible theories that fit the evidence to one degree or another but can’t really be proven.
Mars isnt solved neither is Zodiac & i expect the pyramids to be in the top 5 with no rationale
The Umbrella Man was not a good explanation. It's doubtful that 1960's Texans would understand a protest against Neville Chamberland. More likely sun protection.
There was a lady up close to JFK car, who then vanished, people think she might have see who have shot JFK
@melissagrant4178 I think that in the panic after the first shot, the Secret Service in the car behind him accidentally shot him fatally.
I agree with you on this
Richard Jewel honestly deserves the BIGGEST apology and settlement from the FBI/ government... they intentionally doxxed Richard, who was the actual hero of the story not the villian, and absolutely DESTROYED his life and nearly convinced him to unalive himself, then made him a punchline. Thank you, Richard, for doing what you did and being responsible for saving untold number of lives. You ARE a worthy hero, sir. 🙏
Unalived? You mean killed? It's okay to say killed.
@@VioletJoy UA-cam tends to censor many people and delete their comments if the algorithm's no-no word is picked, I've been riddled with the same problem.
Are we shocked the FBI ruined someone's reputation?
I saw the bombing happen live on tv as a kid, up late over the summer. I remember the scathing press. I'm so glad he was exonerated. It was good for me to see at that age that the press and law enforcement can be wrong and how important it is to consider all the facts, think critically, and not just take what others say as the truth.
❤ in my prayers then, and in my prayers still. You are a hero and always will be in my book❤
Oh the Unsolved Mysteries...
I loved that show!
Robert Stack was the goat
Unsolved Mysteries should never have been taken off the air. We can certainly use this show today.
Unsolved mysteries is on Netflix now with new episodes. It's not anywhere near as good as the original, though.
@@notagamer1898 yeah, all of the original season are basically on every free streaming service now... i gotta watch them, they used to scare the shit outta me as a kid
Aw man. The Mary Celeste mystery has been one of my favorites since I was a kid. I got all excited to hear it had been solved, but you just gave another theory without any proof. Thanks for getting my hopes up, Mojo!
STAY EXCITED these noggins know NOTHING . If alcohol had soaked the boards it would be evident ,its unsolved as are 90 % of these . Mars they are lying about everyone knows that , Zodiac just cos one cipher was PARTIALLY broken still leaves 2 more & no name . Mary Celeste is unsolved m8 keep on dreaming cos this lot are clickbaitig bullsh*tters
My favorite mystery is the USS cyclope it just vinished, people believe it the Bermuda Triangle
The Mary Celeste was built about 30mins from where my family lives, And it was apparently cursed from the getgo....the very first captain didn't even make it out of the harbour before he died...
I remember hearing about a court hearing regarding one of the crew members so a lot was lost over time
@@muralamoomum8287 the titanic was built 30 mins from where my family lives. and apperently curses arnt real.
10 years for 4 murders and only served 38 months, what a travesty.
My Dad killed the guy who killed his pregnant girlfriend as part of a gang initiation, and he got 11 years.............
@@Hollyucinogen you have to wonder about these laws at times
@@HollyucinogenGod on your dad. At least justice was done. He should have got a parade not prison time
White privilege
10 years for Arson, Kidnapping, Assault AND Murder. It's great being a yt man in America
How does someone murder someone and then get served a prison sentence and get out due to good behavior ?? Justice is messed up
Just over 9 months for each life, amazing justice system.
I was wondering the same thing, apparently the guy was more or less just an accomplice, the two guys who died were the main perpetrators. I understand these countdown style videos have to be brief, but that was a pretty important detail to leave out. People are freaking out all over the comment section.
@@Revelwoodiethe other two are dead so it’s a possibility he’s lying about it cause they cant defend themselves
"When my client wasn't killing people, he was always on his best behavior, your honor! A pillar of the community!" 🧐🧑🏼⚖
@@anthonylarosa1155 Possibly. I vaguely remember watching a Dateline episode about the case, I don't remember how much we KNOW about exactly what happened, but the point is he didn't go to prison for murder, as this video suggests. He pled guilty as an accessory to murder.
Writing I'll Be Gone In The Dark emotionally destroyed Michelle McNamara and she passed away from an accidental drug overdose before she could finish the book. Her widower, the comedian Patton Oswalt, made sure her book was completed and published. In the book, McNamara said about herself, "There's a scream permanently lodged in my throat now." When Michelle McNamara died, she had a daughter who was only 7 years old. Michelle's book became huge, but I'm sure a lot of her readers were surprised to learn that she had worked herself to death.
Patton moved on quickly, too quickly, very suspicious.
Fuck off bot. The dude is a comedian, his job is to make people laugh but he was devastated. @@WynnWynn-gl3fk
Maybe. Or maybe just actor mentality.
@WynnWynn-gl3fk They may have been secretly getting a divorce by thar point if he was unable to live with someone who was addicted to drugs. Either that or he mat have quickly remarried because he wanted his daughter to grow up with a mom figure. If you're suggesting that he killed his wife, then you're just being a dick and shame on you.
@sadem1045 yes!!! Anyone who has seen his interviews and heard through folks in his life speak of how he was around this time know he didn't harm her.
"Only 9 of 11 bodies were found, Anastasia's body was missing"
"Oh, turns out one of those bodies were her so mystery solved"
Ummmm....what about the real 2 missing bodies?!
@@GlassGhost428 they found the other two in a close by but different location...
It appears that the Red Army soldiers who killed the Romanovs tried two burn two of the bodies, presumably the two smallest and therefor possibly the two youngest. It takes a long time to burn even the bodies of two teenagers on an open fire outside at night. The dawn was approaching and so was the "White" Army. The mineshaft with the remains of the Tsar, Tsarina, three of their daughters and four other adults were found in 1979 and excavated in 1991 after the fall of Communism in Russia. The bodies in the mineshaft included the skeletal remains of four adult males, two middle-aged females, and three young adult females. One of the four adult males in the mine shaft appeared to be the same age and build as the Tsar and in 1998, his nuclear DNA was found to be a match to that of other male members of the Romanov family. The skull lined up with photos of the Tsar. One of the two middle-aged females in the mine shaft was the right age and build for the Tsarina, and had the same mitochondrial DNA as female descendants of Queen Victoria who was the Tsarina's grandmother. The remains of three young adult females found in the mineshaft were also Queen Victoria mitochondrial descendants and had DNA that was distinct from each other but in all three cases a total overlap with the DNA of the remains identified as the Tsar and also with those remains identified as those of the Tsarina. So those three bodies in the mineshaft were of three of the daughters. Missing from the mine shaft were the Tsarevich Alexi and one of his sisters. In 2007, the burn site was located about 100 meters from the mine shaft where the other nine bodies were found. The two sets of burned bones in the fire pit were found to be of an adolescent male who was a Romanov male AND a Queen Victoria mitochondrial descendant. That could only have been of Alexi. The other set of remains was of another adolescent/young adult female who was a DNA match to the parents and a Queen Victoria mitochondrial descendant, therefor, she was the fourth sister. The two older sisters were conclusively identified as Titania and Olga from their ages, height and other identifying marks on their skeletal remains but there is debate and disagreement among experts over which set of remains are those of Anastasia and which are those of her older sister Marie. Irrespective of which sister's body was burned with Alexi, four sets of remains accounting for all four sisters have been identified as Romanov daughters. Unless some independently identified samples of either girl's DNA are found somewhere else, the specific identity of the two sets of remains will continue to be a mystery.
The person who did not have any sort of DNA match to the remains of the Romanov family was the woman identifying herself as "Anna Anderson" who claimed to be Anastasia and who sued the surviving Romanov family in Berlin and in the US in an attempt to claim some share of the Romanov family fortune. In 1994, her DNA from a tissue sample that was removed from her during surgery was found not to match the mitochondrial DNA of Prince Philip, the Queen's husband, who was a maternal great-nephew of the Tsarina. Anna Anderson's DNA was found to be a match to that of the family of Franziska Schanzkowska, a Polish armaments worker with mental health issues. The Tsarina's brother, Grand Duke Ernest Louis of Hesse, who had lost two of his four sisters to the Bolsheviks, hired a private detective who identified "Anna Anderson" as Franziska Shanzkowska in 1927. Those of us who were rooting for her to be the lost Grand Duchess were dealt a shock when her remains did not match those of the Russian royal family.
The other remains in the mine shaft were those of Anna Stepanovna Demidova, the Tsarina's lady-in-waiting, the Tsar's personal physician, Eugene Sergeyevich Botkin, the family's chef, Ivan Mikhailovich Kharitonov, and a Latvian footman, Aloise "Alexei" Yegorovich Trupp. All of these people, God bless them, volunteered to stay with the Romanov family in their exile and were executed with the family by the Bolsheviks on July 17, 1918.
Most of the family's bodies were found in 1991. The other two were not found until 2007.
Now imagine being accused of killing your own child… fucking heartbreaking
Thats awful & the Drs belong in jail . Theoretical medicine is dangerous
Same with the Dingo case. People are so quick to blame the parent (In truth, it is often them) that they refuse to do even the most basic investigation. And then the prosecutors and police crow to anyone who will listen about how hard they work to protect children. Just like so many laws and ways of thinking, if someone says something 'is for the children' , it almost never really is...
@@CassandraYwhat is the dingo case
@@melissagrant4178 The 'Dingo Ate My Baby' case. Her name is Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton. Her life was ruined because people didn't think a wild dog could snatch and eat a defenseless baby. There are still a ton of people that believe she killed her baby.
@@melissagrant4178 It took them decades to find and piece together the evidence to definitively decide that yes, Dingoes did indeed eat her baby. It's a ridiculous (and tragic) story all around.
The guy killed four people, burned down their house and only got 10 years, but got out in 38 months?!?!🤯😡
I know really?😠
less than 12 months per life that he took. Thats disgusting 😠
It's called American justice system baby.
But he was a good boy in prison.
While the murder of Jun Lin is certainly upsetting, it was only an “unsolved mystery” for a few days. Less than a week later they had identified his murderer and a few days after that they had the bastard in custody. It doesn’t feel like it belongs here alongside the Somerton Man and the Zodiac’s cypher.
I watched the actual Jun Lin video def was a mistake
@@sethtrahan9162sounds traumatizing
A decent number of these entries aren’t solved, but you guys just gave researchers best guess(es) and what they believe. I like WatchMojo, but this was disappointing.
Yes I agree
The McStay family murder was so tragic, I remember seeing the picture of a family looking like them going across into Mexico and had a little hope until their bodies were found and to think that his so called business partner could murder his friend along with not just his wife but to also murder the small kids….just a horrible sad tragedy!
I remember in the initial coverage him saying, “oh i was Definitely the last person they saw…” & being like, “welp, sounds like he knows whats up.” Ugh. What a creep!
Once again Mojo is playing fast and loose with the truth. In this case the words "Finally Solved".
Let me fix the title for you..
"Top 30 creepiest Mysteries , some of which have been solved, others are still just theories about what happened"
not elegant, but at least not a clickbait lie(which Mojo does more often than not)
Or in the case of Luka Magnotta was solved in only days.
@@chrisscanlan1533 Yeah, I also take issue with their use of "finally." Even their number 1 pick was solved quickly. And if they're going to feature creepy criminal cases, that should be its own thing, which I would also watch. I'd rather they had focused on the "took forever to solve" criminal cases rather than just deciding "vampires are creepy let's throw that in the mix to rile people out."
didn't you hear the mystery of the pyramids is now solved, using water to pull the blocks. No time has been spent demonstrating this first hand and we've made no effort supporting this theory, but great news people, this mystery is solved.
@@LibertyRapsher A lot of time has been spend demonstrating this. We've known this for a really long time.
Re Patricia Stallings: Instead of "It was later discovered", I wish you had credited William Sly, M.D., and James Shoemaker, M.D., Ph.D. of Saint Louis University who saw the episode of Unsolved Mysteries featuring Patricia, tested Ryan's blood and proved his mother's innocence.
Bless those men!
I remember the episode of Unsolved Mysteries about the man with amnesia. I'm so happy to hear he finally got his memory back!
I've got to ck out Pierre April! I'm from San Diego and I'd never heard about him.dg
the stones of stonehenge are sourced from multiple places, just few days ago it was publish in nature that one of the central altar stones is all the way from scotland
This entire body of (informational video) is mostly false af. Omg... did you see it too or could it just be me? 😬 22:00
I'm glad they finally identified The Somerton Man. BTW, if you've heard the case of The Boy in the Box, he's also been identified! His name was Joseph Augustus Zarelli.
But the Somerton Man was NOT found in a park, as the commentator said….He was discovered on the Beach!
That was underwhelming to me. So he just happened to die out of the blue and he was a gambler. I remember watching other UA-cam videos about different theories. He was a spy, etc. They never really said how or why he died, did they? Will have to go back and listen again.
@@PennylovesRomeo This video is one of the best on the subject of the Somerton Man…It gives you a great deal of detail about the case…There are many other videos on how the mystery was finally solved!….Ive posted the link for you below this post!
Small footnote to the Franklin Finds. The Erebus and Terror were found EXACTLY where the local first nations had told researchers to look for generations. Odd little bit of bookending history given that the crews didn't listen to the locals in the first place and refused to wear proper clothing and had been warned to stock up on rosehips, neither of which they did.
I lived in the N.W.T for decades and travelled to Nunavut often. The locals i knew would laugh that the researchers never listened them. When they did the researchers took all the credit. Typical
Some cases featured on Unsolved Mysteries with Robert Stack have been solved thanks to DNA technology
🥇
With genealogy testing many more mysteries will be cleared up. I hope killers are nervous and looking over their shoulders.
I go back to school tomorrow. Wish me luck.
Good luck
@@Dad-Says-Jokes doesn't matter because it's not even a race
Good luck hun!
Good luck 🍀👍 my friend
Good luck 😊
Still waiting on Jon-Bennet and the vogurt shop murders to be solved. That shop was right by my house when I lived in Austin. I would stop by and leave a rock on the marker, one for each girl. RIP all you poor children. RIP. You have not been fogotten.
I don't know if JonBenet's will ever get solved...
@@Jessica-wo6pxblame an investigation that decided they knew what happened & refused to actually investigate despite very real leads.
@@Jessica-wo6px I think it's 99 % clear that she died by hands of one of her familiy members, probably the brother by accident and they covered it up.
Yep. The brother is super creepy
Um.... it's not really accurate to include a few of these. A mystery that is solved within a few weeks at most isn't a huge mystery that "FINALLY" gt solved. Nothing should really be on this list that took anything less than a full decade or more to solve. Stuff that was figured out in a few weeks like Jamal's embassy murder really don't count in this context.
I remember when Eric Rudolph was on the run. There were rumors that he was hiding in the woods not far from where I lived and sure enough he was found in Murphy NC, which is about 45 miles from me. I remember seeing bumper stickers on people’s cars that read”Eric Rudolph hide and seek champion 1996-2003”.
10 years for 4 murders and only served 38 months because "he was well behaved". What the actual f*ck?
Waking up in a ditch, broke sounds like a regular Wednesday
These were all cool to learn about. I'm hoping one day they'll figure out the true identities of Jack the Ripper and D.B. Cooper. And what happened to the Sodder children, who the Vilisca Axe Muderer and the Watcher were, and just so many more unsolved mysteries.
From the sheer amount of time that has passed, I really don’t see how the first two can be solved.
I was surprised Cooper wasn't in this video, because it's pretty well established who he was. Somebody found microscopic hybrid metal shavings in his tie that were produced by a company that built airframes for Boeing. He was an employee of that company, but he died back about 2001.
@@patchofdust wait really?? I feel like I watched a video not too long ago that said it was still unsolved . So he made it out the woods alive?
What about Jimmy Hoffa?
One of the Sodder children sent a note as an adult
The Dyatlov Pass Incident had so many strange theories around the deaths of the hikers. What's even _stranger_ is how they came to the conclusion that it was an avalanche:
To digitally simulate the avalanche and snowfall, they used animated technology and coding... from Disney's Frozen.
The head of the simulation lab saw Frozen, was impressed with how the snow looked and behaved, called Disney up for the code and made their own simulated avalanche. They found that, yes indeed, even a small avalanche could cause the injuries seen on the hikers, such as broken ribs. Hypothermia caused 'paradoxical undressing', which explained why some of the hikers were found improperly dressed for the cold.
Also, while avalanches were uncommon in that area, they could still happen. If I remember correctly, all signs even pointed to the risk being higher at just that time. Poor people.
I saw a a review which convincingly debunked the avalanche theory, which does not account for all the observations, such as eyes and tongue missing from one of the girls (local Mantsi people ascribe this phenomenon as the work of dangerous Bigfoot type creatures in the area), why some froze to death while their tent was intact, while they fled in sub zero temperatures without footwear etc. An avalanche also does not explain the high levels of radiation encountered at the scene.
Hypothermia causing people to undress is actually a thing. The pass wasn't the only instance of this.
@@mekkiepoo Some of them froze to death huddled around a fire
The pilots in #11, Lady Be Good, did not eject, they bailed out. There were no ejection seats in WW2 aircraft.
Yeah there were. Nazis used them. Ejection seats were literally patented in the 20s and made during WW2. Talking out of your ass is fun, but even Ace Ventura did some investigating and research, maybe try it once in a while.
that dont matter to clickbaiters
Zodiac = Unsolved
Mary Celeste= biggest loada crap ive ever heard YOU CAN SMELL & see alcohol it actually preserves marine wood .
Pyramids ( LOL )
you are spot on these aircraft did not have ejection capabilities as jumping from a prop plane that is not designed for it is probably gonna killl you .
I mean, bailing out is literally ejecting yourself so..
There are several sites in Britain that have Stonehenge like structures. Stonehenge just happens to be the most known and famous.
There is a portal dolmen just beside where i live, its on a golf course and tourists visit it all the time. Its over 5,000 years old.
They recently found that the altar stone comes from Wales so it's still not 'solved' but more questions raised
@@wilkybarkid I'm glad you said that, I knew there was something very wrong about that part.
"Australia's Somerton Man mystery may have been solved". It has been solved, via DNA. It didn't immediately go public because the authorities told his family first.
lmao i love the fact that we've got one comment saying it has been definitively solved with DNA, and another saying it hasn't been confirmed.
@@dietotaku The "hasn't been" just needed the latest update. It's solved.
We still don't know why he was there and how he died. That was always the more intriguing part of the mystery.
@petraw9792 He committed suicide. That part too has been solved.
@@Michelle-s4z If I'm remembering correctly, I believe he was also in dire health straits anyway, due to a life of alcoholism destroying his liver ...kind of ...winding down. Poor dear.
I am sitting in shock! That disgusting creep who murdered 4 people did 10 months then was released.😮😮😮😮😮
That Roanoke story...can you imagine coming home after years and finding a note saying where everyone went and declaring it a mystery instead of going and checking 🙄 kinda declaws a lot of history's mysteries....maybe the people were just stupid.
What? Lol. John white was gone like 4 years. They weren't familiar with the area and they did try to cross the pamlico sound but it was fruitless. This was the 1580s, not 1980s lol. Croatoan could've meant so many things at that time.
As far as I know, White tried to travel over to Croatoan immediately. But neither the weather nor the crew agreed with him. So he had to travel back to England whether he wanted to or not.
The pyramid explanation had me in stitches. Thanks for sharing. 😂
It’s ridiculous to say it solved.
I can't actually believe Tupac's death was solved. I'll be elated if we found The Zodiac and DB Cooper.
Youre 10th
and jack the ripper
@@Dad-Says-Jokes no one asked how early someone else is
Also Madeleine Mccain.
Probably closer to solving Zodiac than DB Cooper
So even though the zodiac killer will never be identified but apparently they cracked a 50 year old cypher
The Zodiac killer is identified as Arthur Lee Allen.
@@alexbuchholz7072 He's not...
He had already passed. The FBI chose to protect his family because they couldn’t prosecute him anyway.
Sometimes, technology has to evolve in order to solve these mysteries. 🎉
No sh*t Sherlock 😂😂😂
This was so much fun. Thoroughly enjoyed this. 🎉🎉🎉🎉
17:28 'Close Encounters' was such a great film. Unpopular opinion maybe, but I think it's one of Spielberg's best, right up there with Lincoln, Schindler's List, & The Colour Purple.
I completely agree. 👍🏻
The Stonehenge question is not how, but why.
The stones also didn't all come from a nearby forest as claimed in this video, in the past few weeks it's been discovered that at least the middle horizontal stone came from North Scotland. Going by the comments there are a lot of inaccuracies in this video in general.
It is also how. Like the comment above noted, a huge stone is from Scotland. So it is how (how did they move and erect those giant stones) and why (for what purpose)?
Yeah, a few buddy's and me like to drag around and stack multi ton stones around for fun on weekends, couple ropes, couple cases of beer...
@@jasonchinn539 buddies
How they hell can a murderer of 4 serve only 38 months of a 10 year sentence?! The 10 years would have been no where near enough to begin with, 38 months is abhorrent, that is not justice.
I’m surprised there aren’t more people in the comments screaming about #1. How Heather managed to not even get charged is so far beyond the bounds of logic. I can’t imagine that outcome occurring today!
"A grand jury believed Heather was not aware of the murder plot, and she was not tried." Does that help?
@@brianarbenz1329lol right? 😂 Like, do you not believe her or have more information she was in on it or what? Enlighten us then lol. Regardless, why she wasn’t charged was addressed
@@a1ntcry1noveru I don't believe or disbelieve her. I leave that judgement to the grand jury. They heard all the evidence. They did not hear a few seconds about her on a UA-cam, then issue an impetuous verdict on their keyboard.
@@brianarbenz1329 I'm not saying you specifically lol, these were more rhetorical questions addressed to the OP. I responded to you because I agreed with you and then wanted to add my own two cents lol. I too have no idea what the grand jury heard. So the statement that its beyond the bounds of logic is a strong one without any additional evidence or explanation as to why the grand jury decided the way they did or what the girl did
@@a1ntcry1noveru I understand now. No problem.
Get back to me when someone finally solves the Springfield's 3.....
Exactly!
@@SharonEllis-ze6hsI live in a small town a few minutes from Springfield. I found out about this sad case thanks to a bill board outside Bass Pro shop in 2020. I truly hope there is a solution while the family still lives.
Interesting blend of the spooky and the tragic on this list.
I read a scary book called "beneath the dark ice" that included the roanoke colony mystery. Its nice to know they probably just integrated into the native population rather than beng terrified by, then eaten by a colossal squid type creature posessing the semi-shapeshifting abilities of some actual octopi and a disturbing intelligence that again, some real giant squid seem to possess (to a degree)
Maybe they just had some of those magic mushrooms, like you. 😂
Damn those shapeshifting squids!
You forgot that the mystery of the Zodiac Killer was solved as well. It's Ted Cruz.....
STUPID...
Truth is fabulous!!!
Never boring!
Almost 32 minute video uploaded 7 minutes ago, people already commenting as if they watched the whole thing....
I watched it yesterday
What's even more cool about the burial site of Richard III, he was buried underneath car parking spot R. as in his literal initial was marking his resting place and no one knew! Mad! Although when it comes to Stonehenge there is actually more information about that. Some of the stones come from Wiltshire, some from South West Wales, and the altar stone was identified last week that it comes from the north of Scotland, so its even more mysterious now!
1:14 I still can’t believe they got this guy
I can't believe he's pleading not guilty.
The fact this video features CBC News (10:55), 'The 5th Estate' (18:47) & 'The Nature of Things' (24:15) made me realize WatchMojo is Canadian. I should've known from the narrator's accent, but when it's the accent you hear every day sometimes you don't notice when you're hearing it. Hi from Ontario 🍁🍁🍁
It's the way you pronounce OUT
It is really good news that these mysteries are being solved after so long.
It doesn’t change what they did but it’s good that it’s not a mystery anymore.
You don't actually believe this, do you? 😂
A reason I don't test my DNA 😂
Half of the stories she told in the video were solved years ago some even decades ago😂 wth
Only *some of them*. It's misdirection and clickbait to say all of them have been solved!
The Terror miniseries was EPIC ❤🎉
Not the Simon whistler clip lol
I always suspected Stonehenge’s stones were from Wales or Scotland--that’s one mystery out of the way. But the bigger fish to fry is Stonehenge’s purpose; like the number of licks needed to reach a Tootsie Pop’s center, the world may never know.
Edit: Before someone says the stones aren’t from Wales, that’s why I also suggested Scotland as a possibility.
Best theory I've heard is some kind of long scale calendar/clock, like the stones are aligned with the Earth's rotation and sun cycle, so they could tell by the placement of shadows what time of year it was.
According to researches the number of licks it takes is anywhere from 320 to 1100.
Goal posts m8 ,apparantly they were all United fans
Recent research suggests they come from all 3. The upright stones from Marlborough Downs area in England, the smaller blue stones from southwest Wales and the altar stone from Scotland.
@@cailean59Yes, exciting news!
I am REALLY surprised by #1. So it took police a few weeks to solve a murder. That hardly counts as a "long unsolved mystery." By that criteria, half the murders in history should be on this list.
did we ever figure out what happened to Malaysia airlines flight 370?
Nope
It's a mystery
That is another mystery that I want to be slove
Actually I believe so. It's very sad but lots of debris has been recovered on the east coast of Africa and the most dominant theory is that sadly the pilot (or another crew member) used the plane to 'unalive' himself and took the rest of the plane down with him. I can't find the source now, but apparently it was the immediate rumour amongs Malaysia airline staff too, but understandably they kept it quiet... There's some updates online...
actually I think 'unlawful interference' is the official line now, but they don't really know who on the plane it could have been.
Government: “Tell them it wasn’t aliens”
Gullible people: “ok”
I do believe there are aliens out there
If there are aliens theyvare too far away to get here. Also, it's a big if. People think, "The universe is to big to not have other intelligent life" but people don't understand how unbelievably lucky we were to evolve into intelligent life, a huge number of massively lucky things went our way. The odds of this combination happening again is spectacularly unlikely.
@@robirvine6970But if the universe is infinite then it’s guaranteed to have life. It’s egocentric to think we’re the only life in a huge universe.
Gullible people: “our government are hiding aliens from us, because…reasons ”
🙄
😮 Space is a mystery, but a mystery that has other life forms somewhere. Just because we were lucky to evolve into intelligent life. Who's to say that on other plantets, whatever forms of life were intelligent to begin with and didn't have to wait to evolve into it. Now with the invention of cell phones people are finally seeing that the sky is full of intelligent life. They have to be, to be around. The government knew and now we do and have the proof on our camera's. President Reagan said he saw one when he was at a gathering. He happened to look at the right time. He said he was captivated and a little scared. Of course he was president at the time and had to make it top secret. The people with him couldn't tell either. After that he was constantly looking upward but never saw one personally again. He already knew about top secret things going on. When he was no longer president he told about what he personally saw. Of course the government knew he was getting dementia, so of course they made it sound like that was the President's health problem. Regan saw what he saw many years before. I believe him. You just can't dismiss his claim.👽🌎🪐📡🔭🛸
9:00 "most lieky" and "FINALLY solved" are two very different statements. I knew Mojo profits off clickbait, but that feels like a new low.
It hasn’t been 100% confirmed that Carl Webb is the Somerton Man and it has been confirmed that one of the stones in Stonehenge is from Wales
Yes, it has been 100% confirmed to have been Carl Webb
@@andrewfarrell5611 it was such an intriguing mystery too until they were finally able to identify a DNA link.
Scotland - just last week as it goes
@@shinjisan2015 Still an intriguing mystery. Just has an ending, like most stories.
Some of the stones were from wales. The large alter stone was proven to be from Scotland just recently.
They continued to study the geology of the stones and have since discovered stones from Wales and Scotland at Stonehenge which leads anthropologists to believe this was an important centre for many more people than initially thought as well as showing that early peoples travelled and mixed far more than was previously considered. Really interesting.
Why is it called recently solved when most of these were solved ages ago?
Thank you for your work! I love true crime only when “we get the bad guy(s)” this is all in one! Interesting
This is the first time I’ve heard there was a Croatoan island. That completely changes that story. It’s always been told to me like Croatoan was some random word and we couldn’t figure out what it means. That totally changes the story.
That's why conspiracy theories are nonsense, because they always leave out information that makes the theory look bar.
Regarding John Franklin, if you're interested, look up John Rae. He was another 19th Century explorer who found out what happened to Franklin's expedition. This included suggestions the crew were forced into cannibalism. But when he reported that the Victorian society was horrified and he was ostracized, thanks partly to Franklin's widow who did everything she could to glorify her husband's expedition and none other than Charles Dickens who reported that Rae's findings were wrong. Society chose to believe any cannibalism must've been at the hands of the local tribes and Rae fell into relative obscurity. He was finally proven right in the 20th century.
What about BTK? And the boy in the box? They were finally solved after many decades
Who is the boy in the box? That sounds so sad 😢
@@a1ntcry1noveru en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Joseph_Augustus_Zarelli
It is a very sad case :(
@@a1ntcry1noveru Georgia Marie has done great videos about the case - it's incredibly sad..
This video is so interesting! [25:21]You must have spent a lot of time researching to provide such quality information.
At the 9:26 mark, the Russian Dyatlov Pass mystery is a favorite of mine. Sad that 9 experienced hikers had such a tragic ending. Growing up some of my favorite TV shows were UNSOLVED MYSTERIES, IN SEARCH OF and THE MYSTERIOUS WORLD OF ARTHUR C. CLARKE.
Stick to US & Clarke m8 i wouldnt believe a word these mojo noggins said
they messed up half of these - Evem Stonehenge which was worldwide news last week
The Dyatlov Pass Incident - I love how this site just glosses over facts that *disprove* whatever point they are making. Since when does an avalanche pull out one person's eyes and another's tongue? Their bodies were also found in unnatural positions . . . an avalanche. Right.
@@cheriem432 Even an attack by Martians looks more plausible than the avalanche. I don't even know where to begin with the list of things that don't fit.
I actually think Rakitin's version is very close to what actually happened, maybe with some inaccuracies. Explains all the weird things pretty well.
@@cheriem432can’t animals scavenging over dead bodies do that?
@@a1ntcry1noveru It just seems odd that only the eyes or tongue were missing. wild animals are rarely if ever that specific when mauling a dead body.
Love how it's always a completely logical explanation
The Dyatlov Pass has always given me chills since the first time I saw the episode on History's greatest mysteries. I was hoping for aliens or a yeti to be the answer. *sigh* (RIP to the hikers
as the saying goes, when you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not cryptids.
I was sure you were going to put 'Lindy Chamberlain' in the #1 spot. She was the woman who was mistakenly convicted and imprisoned for 3 years in Australia after, she claimed, a dingo took her 9 week old baby out of their tent whilst camping in Uluru in 1980. In 1986, her daughter's jacket was found in a dingo lair, tested and determined to be the daughter's and Lindy was subsequently freed.
On the subject of babies, you could also have included the Lindbergh baby kidnapping in 1932.
Somerton man kind of looks like Harvey Keitel
Fascinating content, thank you.
An avalanche doesn't explain why the hikers didn't show external signs of injury, why some were found wearing the clothes from the dead, or why their bodies had been irradiated
Tbey did have injuries, they scavenged the dead, the radiation was explained in the area they were in. None of the "spooky" nonsence is mentioned in the original incident report and was added later.
Even an attack by Martians looks more plausible than the avalanche. I don't even know where to begin with the list of things that don't fit.
I actually think Rakitin's version is very close to what actually happened, maybe with some inaccuracies. Explains all the weird things pretty well.
@@Yutah1981 from what I heard when that "explanation" came out it was one of many possibilities but given it has no one to blame that's what the government declared happened. But it definitely doesn't explain enough, especially not the "and now we know about the snowmen" line from the diary
The irradiated part can be explained by how the clothes were stored afterward. They weren't really careful where they stored them. That's one hypothesis I can actually believe. Also explains it in a logical way.
Wearing others clothes: some survived the avalanche and they needed more clothes. Simple.
First one I cannot answer though. Can no longer remember if that one was actually true or not.
@@Elora445 1) the injuries they had excluded being able to walk so far away or survive. 2) there were NO traces of said avalanche or snow it should have brought, the tent was lying on top of the snow, and it doesn't explain why they didn't take any things or why they didn't return to take them. 3) their footprints were seen, and they indicated they were walking away, not running. The guy who was found with the most severe injuries had been walking alone.
I think it's pretty obvious someone made them leave. Rakitin's version is the best ones and it explains everything from irradiation to the injuries.
This video is already out of date LOL. The central altar stone at Stonehenge actually originated in Aberdeen, in the North of Scotland.
Here is a very recent update about Stonehenge. One crowning piece unexpectedly came from Scotland.
Yes the middle “alter stone”
You certainly give every common answers the media did.😮
An avalanche does NOT really explain Dyatlov pass. They found many footprints leading from the tent. Some women were missing their eyes, and one her tongue. A man was 16 feet up a tree, and they all had massive internal wounds. Unless you didn't explain shit, avalanche makes no sense.
Good video love the crime ones thanks rip to these people who died happy their families finally got answers 👏👏👏🙏
So if Anastasia was killed with the rest of them, who were the missing 2 bodies?
She was. The bodies were in the same area but slightly separated. The last two bodies were missed on the first dig but found on another.
Cool video !
If the zodiac killer has not been found out, nothings been solved
This should be called "Top 30 Creepiest Mysteries That now Have Additional Theories Which May or May Not be Accurate, but We Don't Really Know, Because They are Still Creepy Unsolved Mysteries and Your Guess is as Good as Mine."
#21 An Avalanche still doesn't explain the radiation burns and the missing tongues and eyes. And the fact that each hiker had completely different injuries from one another.
the missing tongues and eyes were scavenged by wildlife. they didn't have radiation burns, just traces of radiation on their clothing which is explained by the low levels of environmental radiation due to a prior nuclear accident nearby. and their different injuries stem from the fact that they fled in different directions - some got hit by the avalanche (the blunt force trauma injuries), some just got disoriented and died of hypothermia.
Well... Tongues and eyes are easy, that's due to scavengers... they go for the soft orifices first. It's the same thing happening in 'alien' cattle mutilations.
Radiation burns from environmental factors aren't so unusual when you read how frequent and lackadaisical Russia was with her nuclear tests, among other scary shite: Their bio-weapon experiments and 'mistakes' are the stuff of nightmares.
@@dietotaku Just for the sake of argument, name one scavenger that feeds ONLY on eyes and tongues, but leaves open wounds untouched and also leaves no claw or teeth marks, beak impressions tracks or feathers. And if I remember correctly , only one of the hikers was missing their eyes and tongue and only one had radiation burns.
I believe that the person who had radiation burns either worked or had some link to a nuclear plant
@@erickurse7605 You need less 'excitable' sources. None of that is true.
I can't imagine the misery and outrage of losing your child, only to be falsely accused of his murder and prevented from attending his funeral. The state is rarely your friend.
The umbrella man in the assassination of the former president could also have had a skin condition where the sun was like "HA! I HAVE YOUR PALE ASS IN MY SIGHTS!!!"
My first thought was as a parasol ...I use my umbrella for that.
Right.... umbrellas used for sun protection has been a thing for a long time.
I’ve seen the Paulding Light many times. It’s fun to go there to watch the unknowing oohing and awing over the lights.
It's a ghost train. It's some ghost with a lantern........No it's just car headlights from a highway........NOOOOOO!! THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE!!!!
Some people need to believe in supernatural things in order to feel special. Without it their lives are empty.
Some good stuff covered here!
In reference to the 1996 US Olympics bombing a security officer was falsely accused because he was attempting to warn people about the danger and to get away from the area.
How was he thanked? By being the number one suspect accused of the crime until thank God he was cleared.
The takeaway I got from that was if you are the first to report anything you will be the first to be the number one suspect and accuse until hopefully your innocent name is cleared. .... If you're lucky.
I remembered when he died, several local Georgia news site posted "Formerly accused Atlanta Park Bomber has died" and I was like "oh you dipshits"
Sad what someone can go through when authorities had no leads to turn to and I back the blue!!! But they are not flawless and do make mistakes at times
@@lisagibson2975yes and the women who blamed him her family & colleagues want compassion given to her memory as she just made a mistake..I was like wait a minute she accused a innocent man who was a hero of doing this...People still brand him as the "falsely accused/formerly believed bomber" Nah she can also be branded with the title of "falsely accused"
Yeah Richard Jewel really got a raw deal. I remember the coverage of him by the media and it was vicious.
Kids these days will never know the terror of falling asleep on the couch and waking up to Unsolved Mysteries
MYSTERIES SOLVED MY AIRSE.
Lot of these are not solved and, it's just THEORIES.
Theories are just opinions and, we all have them.
Seems more like believing in mysteries is part of your life and you don't want it to be solved.
@@TriViuM2k22
Many mysteries remain unsolved but still, there are experts and scientists who claim to have solved them but, they give some bulls*÷° of an explanation.
Like just about everyone I know believes to have had an encounter with a Ghost or even Ghosts but, those scientists give their own OPINIONS and yet, most of us believe in Ghosts but the scientists refuse accept anything Supernatural.
This is so Trippy!!! I remember when I first heard about the Original Night Stalker. Back in 2007. Never did I dream after researching him for years that he got his start in Visalia! I've been living here on and off since I was 3! And that he lived in Exeter and worked as a Policeman. In my last job I used to drive through Exeter Monday through Friday. And seeing that Water Tower with its name on it on this video. Wow! I was OBSESSED with this case! I read all the books on it. Saw all the early documentaries on it. I even joined a Proboards page, that was dedicated to finding him! I was on that board from 2013 till he was caught. Ironically he is now only 34 minutes away from me in Corcoran prison!
Are Aliens real? That's the mystery I really want to know.
Same here. It whould be interesting to see.
There probably has to be by sheer probability. Whether we have had contact is the big question.
Bitch its real
it's a mathematical certainty that there is life somewhere else in the universe. whether it's intelligent, capable of making contact with us, or even carbon-based is another question entirely.
@@dietotaku I actually argree with you.