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Unsolved Mysteries

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Thread replies: 75
Thread images: 28

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Unsolved mysteries thread. Particularly interested in historical mysteries, occult mysteries and conspiracies, but unsolved murders and disappearances also welcome. Will be posting some from my folder when I find some decent pics.
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>The Location of Agade

>Stretching from the Mediterranean to the centre of modern-day Iran, the Akkadian Empire was a hotbed of cultural activity. At the centre of all this lay the city of Agade, the origin of Akkadian culture and one of the most important places in Ancient Mesopotamia. It influenced events as far away as Babylon and modern-day Oman. Today, we have absolutely no idea what happened to it.

>We know it collapsed, probably as a result of invasion, but beyond that? Nothing. We don't even know where it used to stand. There are contenders for possible sites, notably the mound at Ishan Mizyad, but we've so far found nothing to indicate the greatest city of the period once stood there. Until something turns up, Agade’s location and fate will remain a total mystery.
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>The Eilean Mor Lighthouse

>In 1900, the only living souls on the Scottish island of Eilean Mor were three lighthouse keepers, alone in the vast ocean. The day after Christmas, a supply ship arrived at the island. To the crew’s surprise, the lighthouse keepers were not waiting for them on the island’s small dock. After blowing the ship’s horn and sending up a flare, there was still no activity on the island.

>A replacement lighthouse keeper named Joseph Moore was eventually sent to investigate. As he climbed the narrow, rocky stairs leading up to the lighthouse, Moore recalled being struck with a sense of nameless dread. As he neared the door, he saw that it was unlocked. Stepping carefully inside, he also noticed that two of the three waterproof jackets usually kept in the hall were missing. Reaching the kitchen, he found the remains of a meal and a chair lying on the floor. The clock in the kitchen had stopped working. The lighthouse keepers were nowhere to be seen.

>A further investigation revealed the disturbing final entries in the lighthouse log. In it, Thomas Marshall claimed the island had been struck by severe winds, worse than anything he had experienced in his career. Further entries recorded that the storm continued to rage for a few days. Secure in their lighthouse, the three men had nonetheless begun praying. The last entry stated: "Storm ended, sea calm. God is over all." Though the lighthouse was visible from the nearby island of Lewis, no storms were reported in the Eilean Mor area during the days noted in the log entry.
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>The Green Children of Woolpit

>Two English chroniclers reported a story from the 12th century - that the villagers of Woolpit discovered two children, a brother and sister, who had green skin and spoke an unknown language. Eventually their skin colour returned to normal, but the boy died shortly after being baptized. The girl grew into adulthood and learned to speak English - she explained they were from St Martin's Land, where everything was green, and they had been tending their father's cattle when they followed the animals into a cave. Emerging out of it, they found themselves in Woolpit. Many experts have tried to figure out if the story was some kind of folk tale, or was based at least in part on a true story.
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>The Dancing Plague of 1518

>The Dancing Plague (or Dance Epidemic) of 1518 was a case of dancing mania that occurred in Strasbourg, Alsace (then part of the Holy Roman Empire) in July 1518. Around 400 people took to dancing for days without rest, and, over the period of about one month, some of those affected died of heart attack, stroke, or exhaustion.

>Modern theories include food-poisoning caused by the toxic and psychoactive chemical products of ergot fungi, which grows commonly on grains in the wheat family (such as rye). Ergotamine is the main psychoactive product of ergot fungi. Waller speculates that the dancing was "stress-induced psychosis" on a mass level, since the region where the people danced was riddled with starvation and disease, and the inhabitants tended to be superstitious.
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>The Inventio Fortunata

>The Inventio Fortunata is said to be a lost book, written in the 14th-century for England's Edward III. Penned by a Franciscan from Oxford who travelled the North Atlantic region in the early 1360s, he describes islands in the far north. How far did this person reach in his travels? His work has now become lost, but it was very influential with medieval and early modern geographers.
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>Erwin Rommel's Gold

>German troops fleeing North Africa after their defeat by Allied forces were known to have gotten away with about 200 kilograms of gold, referred to as 'Rommel’s gold' after their commander Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. It was stolen from Jews in Tunisia and kept in six hardened steel boxes. There are three major theories as to what happened to the gold: It was either hidden somewhere in the vast deserts of North Africa, sent to Germany (although it never arrived), or deliberately sunk somewhere off the coast of Corsica.
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>Irish Round Towers

>There are 65 round towers scattered around the country. The best guess that archaeologists have been able to make as to when they were built is sometime from A.D. 600–900. They're all built using the same method with one outer wall surrounding one inner wall that’s filled with rubble and debris. All of the towers are incredibly similar in size, and many have measurements within a few meters of each other.

>There are a number of different theories as to what they were used for. Some have suggested they were simply belfries or watchtowers, while others have suggested a more religious use for them. Some believe they were used for keeping a sacred fire burning, but some claim they're more Christian in origin. Even these claimants suggest that a likely use for them might have been the keeping of sacred books or relics or that they were used as beacons or signalling towers to communicate with others in the area.
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>The Ninth Legion

>The Roman Ninth Legion successfully conquered England in 43AD and kept most of Britannia Superior under control for the next 74 years. Then in 117AD the entire legion suddenly vanished from the historical record. One of the most popular theories is that they marched north into Scotland to fight an uprising of the Picts, but some historians believe the legion simply left to go fight elsewhere.
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Personal favourite:

>Who Put Bella in the Wych Elm?

>On April 18, 1943, four boys looking for birds' nests in Hagley Wood in Worcestershire, England found a human skull nestled in the hollow trunk of an elm tree. Police later recovered more of the skeleton from the tree trunk, along with finger bones and clothing remnants from around the base of the tree. The remains were determined to have belonged to a woman; a scrap of taffeta lodged in her mouth suggested that she had been asphyxiated.

>No one knew who she was, and after six months with no breakthroughs, graffiti began to appear across the region — graffiti that asked one question: "Who put Bella in the Wych elm?"
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Rosslyn Chapel.

15th century chapel linked to the templars and the Masons.
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>>19409288
What ever happened to that guy who wanted to be a feminine disposable maxipads?
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What's the story behind the op pic?
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This is the only good thread on /x/. Thanks op.
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Excellent work, OP. I wish I and the others had something to contribute right now.
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>>19409333
Also known as Saturday Night Fever, there was a documentary produced about it in the 1970s.
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Ken Rex McElroy (June 1, 1934 – July 10, 1981) was a resident of Skidmore, Nodaway County, Missouri. Known as "the town bully,"

in 1980, one of McElroy's children got into an argument with a clerk, Evelyn Sumy, in a local grocery store owned by 70-year-old Ernest "Bo" Bowenkamp and his wife, Lois, allegedly because a younger McElroy child tried to steal some candy. McElroy began stalking the Bowenkamp family, and eventually threatened Bo Bowenkamp in the back of his store with a shotgun in hand. In the ensuing confrontation, McElroy shot Bowenkamp in the neck; Bowenkamp survived, and McElroy was arrested and charged with attempted murder. McElroy was convicted at trial of assault, but freed on bail pending his appeal. Immediately after being released at a post-trial hearing, McElroy went to the D&G Tavern, a local bar, with an M1 Garand rifle, and made graphic threats about what he would do to Mr. Bowenkamp.[8] This led to several patrons deciding to see what they could legally do to prevent McElroy from harming anyone else. Nodaway County Sheriff Dan Estes suggested they form a neighborhood watch.

On the morning of July 10, 1981, after his appeal hearing was again delayed, townspeople met at the Legion Hall in the center of town with Sheriff Estes to discuss how to protect themselves. During the meeting, McElroy arrived at the D&G Tavern with Trena. As he sat drinking at the bar, word got back to the men at the Legion Hall that he was in town. After instructing the assembled group not to get in a direct confrontation with McElroy, but instead seriously consider forming a neighborhood watch program, Sheriff Estes drove out of town in his police cruiser. The citizens decided to go to the tavern en masse. The bar soon filled completely. After McElroy finished his drinks, he purchased a six pack of beer, left the bar, and entered his pickup truck.
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>>19410247
While McElroy was sitting in his truck he was shot at several times and hit twice, once by a center fire rifle and once by a .22 rimfire rifle. In all, there were 46 potential witnesses to the shooting, including Trena McElroy, who was in the truck with her husband when he was shot. No one called for an ambulance.[9] Only Trena claimed to identify a gunman; every other witness either was unable to name an assailant or claimed not to have seen who fired the fatal shots.[10] The DA declined to press charges. An extensive Federal investigation did not lead to any charges.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_McElroy

It's only unsolved cause no one cared, but I still quite like this case. Here is a man who did the most horrible shit to everyone in town and then he's just...dealt with.
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>>19409311
spoopy
>>19409324
This is my favorite. Beat me to it.
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the yogurt shop murders
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1991_Austin_yogurt_shop_murders

villisca axe murders
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villisca_axe_murders

texas servant girl killer
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Servant_Girl_Annihilator
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>>19409708
What?
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>>19409311
I've researched this quite well. It's not unlikely they were swept off the island by a freak wave. 1 of them was pulled away, the other 2 rushed to help. They got whisked away also.
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>The Norse in Greenland and North America

>Although the Norse had settled in Greenland for over 400 years, their colony was at most only a few thousand people. By the later Middle Ages, the colony was in decline, but it seems the last visitor to Greenland came in 1420. What happened to its remaining residents - were they killed off by a plague, or by attacks from the Inuit? Or did they just leave the island and return back to Europe?

>Archaeological discoveries have found that the Norse had set up a small colony at L'anse aux Meadows on Newfoundland, and had sailed to Baffin Island in Canada's far north. It is believed that they ventured further into North America - and since the 19th century some people have offered evidence that the Vikings had reached as far as Minnesota. Some of this evidence has been revealed to be a hoax, but scholars are still searching to see where the land of Vinland might have been
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murders_of_Abigail_Williams_and_Liberty_German
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>>19409708
He became one.
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>The Forbidden Mountain and the Tomb of Genghis Khan

>For 800 years, the Khentii Mountains in Mongolia have been off-limits to tourists and travellers. The reason for this is largely unknown. But many say it is because the area contains the tomb of the 13th-century warrior, conqueror, and imperial ruler Genghis Khan. According to legend, Khan’s tomb was a vast necropolis hidden deep inside the mountains and the builders of the tomb were executed to conceal the secret. It is also said that a forest was planted over the site to hide the leader in his final resting place.

>Today, over 800 years later, an elite tribe called the Darhad protects the land of their ancestor and will likely do so for generations to come. Whether the region really is the location of Khan’s tomb is unknown to the public.
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>no Elisa Lam

Good, that's an improvement
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>>19410647
Why did people confess to the yogurt murders of they didn't do it what the fuck
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>The Big Grey Man of Ben MacDhui

>Known in Scotland as Am Fear Liath Mor, the Big Grey Man of Ben MacDhui is a cryptid, similar to the Yeti or Bigfoot. He is said to be found on Ben MacDhui, the largest peak in the Cairngorm Mountains, and it first became more than a local legend in 1889, when Professor Norman Collie allegedly saw it. Various other accounts have come from a number of people since then, including Peter Densham, a member of the airplane rescue team for Ben MacDhui. Naturalist and mountaineer Alexander Tewnion also claimed to have seen the Grey Man, firing three shots from his pistol at a figure which charged at him through the mist.
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>>19409734
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Peden

Basically a Scottish religious zealot who was harassed by authorities so wore a cloth mask and wig to hide his identity. I recall reading somewhere that it bore similarities to masks found in Iceland, except that those were made from human flesh and were worn by pagans.
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Last night a succubus visited me during sleep paraltsis. I managed to grab a golden ring from her hand put it on the stand next to my bed. When I woke up it wasn't there.

Guess it is all in my head.....
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>The Mysterious Untersberg

>Among the Berchtesgaden Alps on the Germany-Austria border lies the Untersberg mountain. It is one of the most mysterious mountains in the world—with legends of Roman emperors buried deep within its bowels, lost civilizations living in its chasms, and strange beasts prowling its forested surface.

>It is said that these legends drew the attention of Adolf Hitler. Allegedly, he built a house on a nearby mountain and observed the Untersberg through high-power telescopes. Many visitors to the Untersberg have reported missing time and waking up on another part of the mountain. Sometimes, the distances involved are incredibly long and could not have been travelled in the time lost.

>The Austrian writer Stan Wolf claims to have gone up the mountain with a friend to search for these time slips. They reported finding areas on the mountain where their watches would run faster or slower than usual. Wolf also claims that he found a group of men living in a cave who told him that they were SS soldiers from World War II. They supposedly had not aged and believed that the war had only ended recently.
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>>19413241
>First mentioned as Vndarnsperch in a 1306 deed issued by the Salzburg archbishops, the prominent spur has been the subject of numerous myths and legends. According to a popular king in the mountain tale, Emperor Frederick Barbarossa is asleep inside Mt. Untersberg until his resurrection. His beard is said to be growing longer and longer around a round table and to have grown round two times. Myth says that when the beard has grown three times around the table the end of the world has come. When Frederick leaves the mountain, there will be no further Holy Roman Emperor and the last great battle of humankind will be fought at the pear tree on the Walserfeld, a pasture near Wals, west of Salzburg. There is a similar legend for the Kyffhäuser Mountain in Thuringia and Trifels Castle.

Spoopy
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>>19413241
>Other legends say that it is Charlemagne waiting inside the Untersberg,[2] taken care of by the Untersberger Mandln, small dwarf-like creatures. Every hundred years he awakes and when he sees the ravens (actually choughs) still flying around the Untersberg he sleeps for another century. Indeed, Charlemagne had held a synod at Salzburg in 803 AD, where he met with Bishop Arno. The Alpine tradition of the Untersberg Wild Hunt (Perchten) has recently been revived. There are also several legends about the cave system below the mountain.
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>>19409358
>Corsica
the Mafia or French Secret Service got it long ago

>>19412021

Look up Newport Tower in Newport Rhode Island
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>>19413392
This it's the south american Futhark of Jacques Mahieu, based on the Amambay runes and the Kensington stone.
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>>19413392
>the Mafia or French Secret Service got it long ago

Probably. Maybe even Mossad got a look in since it was Jewgold. Here's another Nazi gold one:

>The Treasure of Lake Toplitz

>High in the Austrian Alps, and deep in the dense mountain forest, Lake Toplitz is an ideal place to hide $5.6 billion of stolen gold. Rumors have long surrounded this isolated lake, with lifelong local Michl Kaltenbrunner claiming she can "guarantee" that the Nazis dumped gold in the lake. She would have been about 10 years old when World War II ended.

>What gives this theory some credence is that £700 million of counterfeit notes that Hitler had planned to use to destabilize the British economy were recovered from the lake in 1959. The dilemma here of course is the question of whether this is what the locals saw the Nazis dump in the lake or just part of what went down. The lake is over 300 feet (100 meters) deep, with a layer of logs floating roughly halfway down, making investigations a very risky ordeal.
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>>19413478
If that cabin wasn't half sunk it would be a very comfy place
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Voynich manuscript
>Written in Central Europe at the end of the 15th or during the 16th century, the origin, language, and date of the Voynich Manuscript—named after the Polish-American antiquarian bookseller, Wilfrid M. Voynich, who acquired it in 1912—are still being debated as vigorously as its puzzling drawings and undeciphered text. Described as a magical or scientific text, nearly every page contains botanical, figurative, and scientific drawings of a provincial but lively character, drawn in ink with vibrant washes in various shades of green, brown, yellow, blue, and red.
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>>19413478
>>19413347
>>19413294
>>19413241
Was thinking of visiting Austria later this year with a friend. Might have to check these out. Sounds good for spoops
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>>19410260
Good riddance.
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>>19413478

>with a layer of logs floating roughly halfway down

vot?
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>>19413786
This can happen if loggers in the local area are careless. The logs become waterlogged and sink to around halfway, forming a 'false bottom' of the lake. This can also happen naturally if a forest is flooded. Lake Superior also has something similar in parts.
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>>19413801

Hmm. I learnied something today. Thx for that, anon
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Bump, and in order for it not to be an useless bub geres some mystery:

>Parthian Battery

>The Baghdad Battery or Parthian Battery is a set of three artifacts which were found together: a ceramic pot, a tube of one metal, and a rod of another.

>It was found in Māhōzē (modern Khujut Rabu) close to the metropolis of Ctesiphon in the satrapy of Assuristan (Assyria-Mesopotamia) during the period of the Parthian Empire (150 BC-223 AD) or Sassanid Empire (224-650 AD).

>Wilhelm König was an assistant at the National Museum of Iraq in the 1930s. In 1938 he authored a paper offering the hypothesis that they may have formed a galvanic cell, perhaps used for electroplating gold onto silver objects. This interpretation is generally rejected today.

>While some researchers refer to the object as a battery, the origin and purpose of the object remains unclear.
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>>19412840
you underestimate how twisted some people are and want notoriety, even if its bad notoriety. During the black dahlia case there were hundreds if not thousands of confessions once word got out how gruesome it was and the case got famous
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>>19409324
I can believe this one. I saw fey folk when I was a kid, the entrance to their realm that day at least was underneath an old stone wall(part of a early medieval manor house ruin) in the park nearby. A brick big enough for a child to slip under paved the way. My dad was talking to the groundskeeper whilst I hunted for snakes in the long grass and out of sight when I saw the shimmering lights and missing brick(Brick as in stone slab not tiny)

Beyond the wall was a kids playground but inside the wall was another world. Floating castles with high gardens,long green fields, rainbows and diamond lights twinkling and little men and women going about their work zooming in and out of these little sparkly burrows in the ground vanishing into thin air. The women had wings. The men did not but ran extremely quickly. I felt very strange and tingly seeing it. It was beautiful and I'd do anything to see it again.

It was the greatest encounter of anything paranormal I've ever had. When they noticed me, one of the women gasped and "squeaked"(possibly speaking but due to size sounded like squeaks) rapidly in the best way I could describe and "pushed" me out with her voice.
I told my parents and everyone about it. No one believed me "Kids and their imagination".

I went back next day. The wall was sealed up, the brick replaced,the long grass around it cut and the groundskeeper nowhere to be seen which was unusual.
The guy disappeared. Never saw him again. That detail spooks me to this day because in some Celtic folklore about Fey folk its said they have man servants that guard their doorways.
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>>19409333
Like that episode on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. "Once more with feeling" with the demon that makes the entire town sign and dance until they die.
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>>19415149
4channers and their imagination...
please though, leave us alone.
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>>19412201
Expedition Unknown with Josh Gates dealt with this and spoke to the protectors. Interesting episode.
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>>19413294
The buried emperor/King in the Mountain is a common theme in history and folklore(If it is folklore...). Constantine XI is said to have been whisked away during his final charge against the Muslim invaders by an angel and encased in Marble below the Golden Gate of Constantinople and when a pure Christian soul touches the statue, he will reawaken and cleanse the city of Turks and reclaim the empire in the name of God.

Turks were so terrified of the sleeping Emperor(as his body was never found) they blocked access to the caverns beneath the gate and sealed the direct entrances with bricks and to this day its forbidden.

Pic related. The Gate today.
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>>19415174
It's not imagination lad. I know what I saw and felt.
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>>19410260
>>19410247

Best post so far
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>>19415161
It's actually what inspired it.
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>>19410100
kek
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>>19410247

>the town bully

What's the mystery here? Everyone hated the guy. Does it matter who the exact person was that shot him? It's as if the whole town was an accomplice to murder. It's sort of like that Steven Avery case from Wisconsin.

>>19409288

>Cattle Mutilation

>In most cases mutilation wounds appear to be clean, and carried out surgically. Mutilated animals are usually, though not always[11] reported to have been drained of blood, and have no sign of blood in the immediate area or around their wounds.

George E. Onet, a doctor of veterinary microbiology and cattle mutilation investigator, claims that mutilated cattle are avoided by large scavengers "such as coyotes, wolves, foxes, dogs, skunks, badgers, and bobcats" for several days after its death. Similarly, domestic animals are also reported to be "visibly agitated" and "fearful" of the carcass.[12]

According to a survey taken by the National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS), mutilation of the eye occurred in 59 percent of cases, mutilation of the tongue in 42 percent of cases, the genitals in 85 percent of cases, and the rectum in 76 percent of cases.[13]

According to Dr. Howard Burgess, nearly 90 percent of mutilated cattle are between four and five years old.[14]
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>>19415546

>Some mutilations are said to occur in very brief periods. A 2002 NIDS report[15] relates a 1997 case from Utah. Two ranchers tagged a specific calf, then continued tagging other animals in the same pasture. The ranchers were, at the most, about 300 yards from the calf. Less than an hour later, the first calf was discovered completely eviscerated—most muscle and all internal organs were missing. There was no blood, entrails, or apparent disturbance at the scene. Independent analysts both uncovered marks on the calf's remains consistent with two different types of tools: a large, machete-type blade, and smaller, more delicate scissors.

>The absence of tracks or footprints around the site of the mutilated carcass is often considered a hallmark of cattle mutilation[citation needed]. However, in some cases, strange marks or imprints near the site have been found. In the famous "Snippy" case, there was an absolute absence of tracks in a 100 ft radius of the carcass (even the horse's own tracks disappeared within 100 ft of the body.) But within this radius several small holes were found seemingly "punched" in the ground and two bushes were absolutely flattened.[16] In Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, June 1976, a "trail of suction cup-like impressions" was found leading from a mutilated three-year-old cow. The indentations were in a tripod form, 4 inches in diameter, 28 inches apart, and disappeared 500 feet from the dead cow. Similar incidents were reported in the area in 1978.[17][18]
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>>19415546
It's not so much a spook case, I just like the idea of the whole town including the sherrif just turning a blind eye to this man being murdered on a street and the entire down just sticking together even when under an FBI investigation
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>>19409341
Hyperborea nigga
>>
Lost Incan Treasure
In Ecuador, supposedly an Incan emperor, known as Atahualpa hid a treasure in the Llanganates, a lot of people who have gone there went missing.
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>>19409415
>The first possibility came from a statement made to police in 1953 by Una Mossop, in which she said that her cousin Jack Mossop had confessed to family members that he and a Dutchman called van Ralt had put the woman in the tree. Mossop and van Ralt met for a drink at the Lyttelton Arms (a pub in Hagley). With van Ralt was a Dutchwoman. Later that night, Mossop said the woman became drunk, and passed out while they were driving. The men put her in a hollow tree in the woods in the hope that in the morning she would wake up and be frightened into seeing the error of her ways.

>Jack Mossop was confined to a Stafford mental hospital, because he had reoccurring dreams of a woman staring out at him from a tree. He died in the hospital before the body in the wych elm was found
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>>19415247
I live there and have never heard of this story before.
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>>19409333
>Known to have reemerged in the 1970 among the african population
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>>19410647
> yogurt shop murders
i've never looked too deep into this but it's really interesting. any info on who was working in the shop that night? did they survive/what happened to them?
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>>19418125
what's this?
>>
>>19409288
Hinterkaifeck is old but still spooky
>>
File: Photograph-of-Father-Crespi.jpg (20KB, 312x320px) Image search: [Google]
Photograph-of-Father-Crespi.jpg
20KB, 312x320px
>>19418238
Lost ruins of the amazon.
>>
>>19418233
all girls died, idk who was working. The wiki page says the girls knew each other and were planning a sleepover so id guess some worked there while the others were waiting for them to leave and got caught in a robbery turned murder and rape. Same as the Hi fi murders
>>
>>19415247
CONSTANTINE XI WILL RISE ONLY WHEN CONSTANTINOPLE IS IN CHRISTIAN HANDS
>>19418004
You will hear his name when we drive you T*rkroaches out.
>>
>>19409288
The KFC files
>>
>>19419564
Good. Let me know how that goes.
>>
>>19412088
Who's the retard that lets two kids go hiking by themselves?
>>
>>19409288
>>19409299
https://discord.gg/PVrZamw
>>
>>19418238
OwO what's this??
Thread posts: 75
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