Hi! As a person who's very interested in this case I want to say a few things: 1. Slab avalanche theory is known for years (at least since 2017) 2. Sciencists mentioned by you used avalanche simulation based on physics of snow in the movie Frozen 3. The source of radiation: most of victims were working with radiation at Polytechnic or in nuclear facility Mayak and that's how a tiny amount of it was found on clothes.
@willehster2 жыл бұрын
it’s crazy that animation techniques have come so far that scientists are using their physics to simulate avalanches.
@mickeydangerez2 жыл бұрын
Really they don't work in lab coats? All of them radiologists?
@TheRatManBob2 жыл бұрын
@@mickeydangerez Something to remember is that around the time of the incident Las Vegas was selling tickets to watch nuclear explosions without protection. Things were a bit loosey goosey back then
@ct56252 жыл бұрын
@@mickeydangerez Doesn't matter if you wear a lab coat, and not all of the victims displayed increased levels of radiological contamination. Also, this was 1959, in the Soviet Union. Safety was rarely considered.
@oneoflokis2 жыл бұрын
Is that so?!
@thisisnatedean2 жыл бұрын
Dyatlov Pass updates? I've never clicked on a video so fast...
@mrichards47242 жыл бұрын
For real 👍
@samhowl11522 жыл бұрын
That's dumb bro.
@rabbidninja792 жыл бұрын
Same
@toothscrape2 жыл бұрын
yep
@greggygilgen56912 жыл бұрын
legit
@bobmasters98712 жыл бұрын
I think it's a little disappointing when a cool mystery has a simple and frankly boring answer, but I think the important thing is that this isn't just lights in the sky or a strange discovery, these were people, that died. There are people related to the incident that deserved closure that probably never got it. So having a likely truth to the incident is a good thing, even if it is "boring"
@getsideways72572 жыл бұрын
Better safe than "exciting"... Of course, it won't help the victims in any way.
@BillyBob-wq9fl2 жыл бұрын
Always some scientist saying: nothing to see here.. move along.. “Swamp gas refracting”
@BillyBob-wq9fl2 жыл бұрын
Scientists are not always trustworthy.. Media is not always trustworthy.. If something nefarious was going on.. would they let that information out?
@getsideways7257 Жыл бұрын
@@wizzolo Good catch
@qwopiretyu Жыл бұрын
I think all mysteries have a boring explanation. They're only mysteries until we have an explanation.
@timgleason25272 жыл бұрын
I know you like doing all kinds of topics and I love each and every one. BUT these unsolved mystery ones are fantastic.
@jmoranretana2 жыл бұрын
I do agree.
@SzechuanChickenDog2 жыл бұрын
If you like that type of thing... Check out "why files" mostly mysteries. Great channel
@beatriceroosmark2 жыл бұрын
Yes love them
@ryanb97492 жыл бұрын
@@SzechuanChickenDog I was going to say this
@BTScriviner2 жыл бұрын
Yes, they're among my favorites too.
@opalishmoth8591 Жыл бұрын
I feel like this fact is way too often overlooked: Not all the victims body’s had the same evidence. The blunt force trauma (equivalent to that of a car crash) was only seen in the bodies in the ravine. The radiation was only found on two of the bodies in the ravine.
@BusinessWolf1 Жыл бұрын
@atmega16a5nah, I think the russian government being characteristically russian covered up the fact that they used to leave nuclear portable batteries in random spots in the wilderness during soviet times.
@Starry-ph6yx7 ай бұрын
@@BusinessWolf1the radiation is because some of them worked in nuclear plants
@allanshpeley42845 ай бұрын
The blunt force trauma could have been caused by them falling into the ravine as they tried to outrun the avalanche.
@clairenollet23892 жыл бұрын
A few years ago, a homeless man in our city was in a parking lot in the middle of the night on a hideously cold night. The security cameras in the parking lot (which weren't monitored overnight, just kept running) caught glimpses of him as he wandered around, paradoxically undressing, before he finally curled up behind a dumpster. It was heartbreaking, knowing that he was hastening his own death.
@Snook_YT2 жыл бұрын
it happens because once you get so cold your mind goes crazy basically, you get either so cold or so hot, you start frantically taking your clothes off. Happens quite often on Mount Everest
@joshuacsupohdvideomaker7873 Жыл бұрын
Hypothermia can cause you to feel like your body is burning up therfore you take your clothes off
@LowLuvR117 Жыл бұрын
hyperthermia makes u hot a burning burnjng feeling n u will undress
@xyz75722 ай бұрын
Poor man. I hope he didn’t suffer, at the end.
@clairenollet23892 ай бұрын
@@xyz7572 I was once caught out in the weather here in Buffalo. I left the house at noon in 65F weather, wearing only a sweater. I hadn't checked the forecast (always a mistake in Buffalo!) and didn't know the weather would drop to near freezing (32F) by the evening. I ran several errands by bus, and in the evening, I had to wait for my last bus in 35F temperatures, with a stiff wind pushing the wind chill down considerably. My exposed head and hands got terribly cold, and became very painful. It took about 45 minutes for me to "thaw out" when I got home, and the sensation in my warming hands was excruciatingly painful. I've heard that as you enter the last stages of hypothermia, the pain goes away and you feel warm and peaceful, but the time leading up to freezing to death hurts a lot, based on my personal experience.
@zappababe85772 жыл бұрын
I think people over-estimated the fortitude and resilience of the students as they were experienced hikers, and underestimated just how powerful and brutal Mother Nature can be. No amount of experience can protect you from a massive amount of snow sliding down and engulfing you. It is very sad, but not mysterious.
@xleaselife2 жыл бұрын
You must be a really fun person to be around. I'm sure you never make mistakes when typing.
@a_donut2 жыл бұрын
@@xleaselife Dont give it attention, thats what they feed off of
@xleaselife2 жыл бұрын
@@a_donut You're right. A lesson to not make a KZbin comment when I just woke up.
@nationalcitysycho2 жыл бұрын
YOU BELIEVE THAT SHIT..SMH. RADIOACTIVITY & A MISSING TONGE!..
@nationalcitysycho2 жыл бұрын
MOTHER NATURE HAD NOTHING TO DO. THIS GUY IS STUPID..HER EYES WERE NOT EATIN & HER TONGUE HAD HER PALET MISSING TO.
@dewilew21372 жыл бұрын
I’ve always wondered, if someone is aware of the phenomenon of paradoxical undressing, would they then try their hardest not to undress, knowing and understanding what their body is going through? Or is the brain so badly affected by that point that they are too disoriented to consider trying to stay dressed to save themselves? If anyone knows or has any relevant contribution, I welcome your responses.
@Crowbars22 жыл бұрын
I've always wondered that. Bump to see if you get an answer from someone else.
@oskrm2 жыл бұрын
Maybe. The problem is you can't think straight. If you're really thinking straight, why would you go against logic and take off your cloth in the snow?
@dryb33012 жыл бұрын
The nervous system is so much in shock and they are not in the right mind , exactly as you suggested. Our body needs a very narrow range of temperature to function properly. Beyond that , nothing works as it supposed to, especially the brain. I've seen hypoxic patients trying very hard to rip off their oxygen mask, very frequently I might add
@Crowbars22 жыл бұрын
@@oskrm Yeah, but even if you can't think straight, would someone still be able to keep enough of a thought in their head to say to themselves "Yeah, I might be feeling incredibly hot right now. But it's just a symptom of hypothermia. If I remove my clothes, it'll only make it worse." And get yourself to survive a bit longer. Between 20-50% of people who die of hypothermia have paradoxical undressing, so we know it doesn't happen in everyone. The question is, do the people who still have their clothes do so because they fought the urge to undress, or because they didn't feel the urge to undress at all?
@Lopfff2 жыл бұрын
@@Crowbars2 Somebody should ask them
@richardspanner59232 жыл бұрын
Regarding the missing tongue : 'Scavenging animals' is a perfectly sufficient explanation here, but as It's quite common for people involved in car accidents (and similar traumatic impacts) to bite parts of their own tongue off during the moment of collision, _(usually just the tip)_ _So it seems possible, quite likely even, that a human body (even a dead one) may potentially bite their own tongue off whilst they're being rolled over and violently thrown about inside an avalanche._
@6foot8jesuspilledpureblood822 жыл бұрын
One thing to note is the stomach was found full of blood suggesting that it happend while alive. Also I think it was found fully torn out not "bitten off" but not sure
@Jayleenyc2 жыл бұрын
I bit through my tongue in a car accident.
@robinhodges64742 жыл бұрын
That's what I was thinking too
@nb33442 жыл бұрын
animals would eat the easily available body parts. I have read Russian assessments which stated so.
@whatzittooya38732 жыл бұрын
I have seen the autopsy photos. The person whose tongue was missing was well into decomposition and most of the face was gone, not just the tongue. When this story gets retold and the missing tongue is brought up as a mysterious point I just cringe because it's always out of context.
@Nefville2 жыл бұрын
I'm an experienced hiker and the fact that they cut themselves out of the tent, with no clothes on, always suggested to me that it was an avalanche. There's not a lot of scenarios where someone would cut themselves out of a tent, the ones I can think of are avalanche and maybe wildlife in the tent blocking the exit. But that they had no clothes on suggested avalanche while they were asleep. So this is good, closes the book for me at least.
@JohnWellingtonWells2 жыл бұрын
Speaking as someone with no experience on the subject. Is it common to sleep only in your underwear while hiking in winter?
@NathanTarantlawriter2 жыл бұрын
The slope was too gentle to support an avalanche, but I agree it was something natural. I can go with a "slab avalanche" though. It could have been a tornado that spooked them with high winds.
@NathanTarantlawriter2 жыл бұрын
@@JohnWellingtonWells It is if you have a hot tent an you want your clothes to dry. I've done this many times.
@emilily65132 жыл бұрын
@@JohnWellingtonWells I don't think it would be.
@TerrinX2 жыл бұрын
I'm still onto Lemino's theory, considering their burnt clothes which seems to be the most overlooked detail
@BeanDar2 жыл бұрын
I used to be a firefighter EMT, and a lot of firefighters who have died while battling fire, were found with their gear off due to paradoxical undressing. The air in their airpack ran out, the smoke gets too heavy, the heat too intense, so on and so forth.
@Seth98092 жыл бұрын
And yet people are confused why the group is almost naked.
@abnnizzy2 жыл бұрын
I can understand people being killed by intense HEAT trying to take their clothes off, but in a place with intense COLD? That seems a little strange.
@whyisyoutubeshowinghandles2 жыл бұрын
@@abnnizzy You know that feeling when you touch something really cold on a really cold day and it starts to feel like your hand is burning? I think it's like that (edit: but way more severe)
@abnnizzy2 жыл бұрын
@@whyisyoutubeshowinghandles I don't know that feeling. I feel like its really cold.
@sendmorerum82412 жыл бұрын
@@abnnizzy That's why it is called "paradoxical". Firefighters undressing due to heat shouldn't be called like that.
@Enjoymentboy Жыл бұрын
Now I guess the only unanswered question about this is how all the Yeti and aliens seem to be immune to slab avalanches. What do they know that we don't?
@timokautto7349 Жыл бұрын
Looool
@swahilimaster Жыл бұрын
Ask Johan Gaume about it, he is clearly one of the aliens you are talking about, dude looks like he bought his human suit from a lizardman.
@erikcrouch78813 ай бұрын
Proper footwork. ☝️
@julienotsmith70682 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU for pointing out how dangerous that hike was.
@franklinkz24512 жыл бұрын
To the rest of the world… thats called Sarcasm, and most people cant stand Sarcastic people
@julienotsmith70682 жыл бұрын
@@franklinkz2451 only about half. I’m amazed at how many people think a hike through the Urals in freaking January was just a no-stress lark. In fact I’ve wondered for years if they were up there for some legitimate reason. It would make more sense. Russian or not, that wouldn’t be a fun hike.
@wolfmantroy66012 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@petraw97922 жыл бұрын
@@julienotsmith7068 So this is the real conspiracy, why were they out there?
@julienotsmith70682 жыл бұрын
@@petraw9792 More a question. History is full of them.
@richysradioroom2 жыл бұрын
The gas lanterns they used had mantles made of Thorium dioxide commonly a major component; being radioactive. I use them to test my Rad detectors . And thank you JOE for doing a update.
@MaddogJones2 жыл бұрын
That's been my theory for the radiation detected on a couple bodies. Perhaps on was carrying the lantern when it broke and another was carrying spare mantles... There wouldn't be enough radiation to harm you but there would be enough to be detected.
@dewilew21372 жыл бұрын
I wonder why the radiation issue was ever even considered strange then. This seems like such an obvious cause, and something that should have been initially considered. Were their items not inventoried and tested? It’s weird that the radiation even became part of the conspiracy theory with such an obvious source.
@janemiettinen51762 жыл бұрын
Then all of their clothes wouldve tested the same. Now it was just two guys and only their pants, both worked with radioactive stuff. Im more inclined to say it was carried from there, not the lanterns.
@julienotsmith70682 жыл бұрын
Oooh, I knew there had to be a logical explanation, given how casual everyone was about radioactivity then.
@Fizzypopization2 жыл бұрын
Actually the radioactivity was even worse than that as someone said it colored their skin. If they had that much radiation they had to be exposed to actual radiation containments.
@lisamann Жыл бұрын
HOLY COW my ex husband and I experienced the karman vortex street sound near Mount Hood in Oregon!! It was at a subsonic level- we could plug our ears and it got louder. It happened ALL NIGHT one night while we were camping. It was absolutely terrifying, we did not sleep AT ALL. In the morning, it was gone. Now we have an explanation!! Thank you!!
@richardknott4626 Жыл бұрын
They are saying though that the KVS can cause internal injuries without external damage.
@Clarence-Homelab2 жыл бұрын
A follow-up video and a truthful (not misleading) title followed by good content. What an absolute treat!
@gaarabucket2 жыл бұрын
Idk this was a pretty misleading video to be honestly. He didn’t include any info that didn’t fit his theory and there is actually a lot. For example the animal taking her tongue makes no sense on account she was proven to be alive when she lost it. The to first found bodies (the two yuris) hand their own skin in their mouths. They’re was an undisturbed flag pole behind the camps found in both the camp pictures before the incident and the crime scene photos after and it was in the same exact position. Even a slab avalanche would have moved that. Furthermore the yuris where found by the remnants of a fire. One of those yuris had a burn injury on the leg. They later found that dubina had his pants (burn marks and all) cut up and tied around her shins. This means she outlived him and presumably wasn’t to injured to take his pants, meaning her injuries likely occurred later after the original incident. That being said hers and two other people found had injuries from compelling force, and yet very little externally injuries. If I remember right it was a few scratches in some of them, however this was from a while ago when I directly translated from Russian so I can’t remember who had such injuries. However all that being said the three who died of terrible internal injuries should have had more external signs of injuries from an avalanche. I don’t pretend to know what it is but I also don’t pretend that you could wrap and easy bow on it or that “the most logical solution is the answer” because there is simply no logical solution. It was likely a large series of odd events but this video is no more “truthful” than any other.
@chillinwithaguitar99802 жыл бұрын
Come look to see what Australian life is like an to see What our animals look like. Hope to see you there 🐨🇭🇲
@dotifer1982 жыл бұрын
Love this! I watched Caitlin Doughty, aka Ask a Mortician, explain how the movie Frozen helped solve this mystery. It is nice to see that the science backs it up. Both good videos and great mysteries.
@RealBradMiller2 жыл бұрын
Friggin' love that woman to death!! Her books are well worth a read. I'm evening wearing merch from the Order of the Good Death right now!
@oneoflokis2 жыл бұрын
A Disney movie?? 😄😄
@FillipJPhry2 жыл бұрын
love that channel. she's so fascinating
@m.f55692 жыл бұрын
@@redneckshaman3099 lmao chill
@jadenpeltier12632 жыл бұрын
Guess she couldn’t “let it go” 🥲
@TheVirtualObserver2 жыл бұрын
There was a really great article about the Dyatlov Pass Incident written highlighting the same study Joe covered in the New Yorker earlier this year. It’s an excellent read if you’ve got the time. Also I’d love for Joe to cover the Khamar-Daban pass incident since it’s lesser known and possibly more horrifying.
@ChadVulpes Жыл бұрын
Holy wow, that one's new to me. Thanks for sharing.
@BicholasNoykin7104 ай бұрын
As I came across this video my first thought was "I hope he also covers the Khamar-Daban incident". That one terrifies me to this day. Absolutely horrifying, especially for Valentina. Hopefully he covers the mystery one day.
@pamelamorgan73542 ай бұрын
Thank you! I just searched this and it’ll be my next KZbin watch!
@phillip60832 жыл бұрын
If you ever went camping back in the day like I did....you learned about old coleman lantern mantles. They were slightly radioactive and after the first use they were basically radioactive fly ash.
@theobserver91312 жыл бұрын
I camped a lot "back in the day". I didn't even really call it camping, I just basically lived outside during the summer (in Minnesota). Just because I went camping, why would I have learned that Coleman lantern mantles are radioactive? If the trees knew anything about it, they weren't talking. I don't think I even used Coleman lanterns anyway. When it got dark, I just let it be dark.
@theobserver91312 жыл бұрын
I owned a Coleman lantern, I just didn't bother using it. More stuff to carry. I am a minimalist camper. Usually just a couple of blankets and some snacks. I hate sleeping bags. I can't stand being trapped in the bag, and they're usually too hot.
@cynvision2 жыл бұрын
makes me wonder what is in Thermacell pads
@sladewilson97412 жыл бұрын
Those things were awesome.
@acts95312 жыл бұрын
@@theobserver9131 I'm from Minnesota originally too. I don't care what else you had along on your nocturnal perambulations I KNOW one thing you had lots and lots of. Skeeter dope, preferably 100% DEET but the strongest you could get your hands on whatever that might be. Without that pretty much anywhere in rural Minnesota is unlivable after dark. Anyone who says otherwise is either a liar or not a Minnesotan. It's not a matter of being too tough for the mosquitos, you could literally sustain enough bites to trigger a histamine reaction if you just go out there in the woods in bare hide and resolve. I was born in Freeborn County and spent significant parts of my life in Douglas, Cass, Koochiching, Lake of the Woods and Beltrami Counties. Good to find another Minnesotan. Where are you from?
@Skitchhiker2 жыл бұрын
I always wondered how they found foot prints in the snow nearly a month later. Especially in an area with extreme weather.
@AllynHin2 жыл бұрын
I made that exact comment on the previous video and had several commenters reply to explain to me how snow works. LOL I think it was a few folks trying to sound superior, but yeah, I always wondered that, too.
@deborahminter62312 жыл бұрын
Because there was no avalanche, and the footprints remained frozen in the snow.
@Skitchhiker2 жыл бұрын
@@deborahminter6231 I can see how that would work in some places, but considering the weather there is reported to be high winds and regular snow fall it just doesn't make sense to me. I live in Virginia, and if the snow fall and wind are consistent for more than a day or two, foot prints are gone. Then again, I'm no expert on that area and there is very likely something Im not seeing see or considering. To be clear, I don't think it's a conspiracy, it just doesn't add up for me.
@deborahminter62312 жыл бұрын
@@Skitchhiker Totally! It may be no conspiracy at all, it just seems that the theories so far have yet to adequately explain what happened. Maybe some day will finally get answers 🤷♀️
@dianac24982 жыл бұрын
Maybe the avalanche hit them only 3-4 days before they were found. Perhaps they had other issues that put them behind schedule, and that’s why they were there. Not sure if that makes sense but I am also curious about the footprints.
@sandorsbox2 жыл бұрын
Paradoxical Undressing doesn't account for why they fled the tent naked. And the tent wasn't "covered with snow", it had very little snow on it and was easily visible to searchers
@maggielarkin93142 жыл бұрын
Yep... and if paradoxical undressing is about thinking you're too hot in freezing conditions and take off your clothes then WHY did they light a fire???...
@AmusedChild8 ай бұрын
They didn't flee naked.
@sandorsbox8 ай бұрын
@AmusedChild several did because their wasn't enough clothing found among them to cover all and several were wearing clothes of the others
@allanshpeley42845 ай бұрын
When they heard/felt the avalanche, they rushed out of the tent as quickly as possible in the clothes they had on in preparation for going to sleep that night. When they got far enough away to feel safe they either started a fire to stay warm or tried to make their way back to the tent and died along the way. The ones who were more undressed than they would be for sleep were the ones who were already hypothermic and began paradoxically undressing.
@MrGuywiththelongname2 жыл бұрын
I really love how you'll go back and cover topics more in depth or share new findings. It can't be easy to stay on top of it all but it is greatly appreciated
@kavalogue2 жыл бұрын
There was nothing here that was "more in dept" than any other video made on it in the last near decade. There where no new findings. Everything he stated has been known for years. Idk if this guy knew his fan base didn't know about this incident, or he just thought we where all idiots. But he's years and years late
@chillinwithaguitar99802 жыл бұрын
Come look to see what Australian life is like an to see What our animals look like. Hope to see you there 🐨🇭🇲
@blacktoothfox6772 жыл бұрын
Oh it's real easy when you have a team writing scripts. Read more, KZbin less
@allhandsonsteamdeck14402 жыл бұрын
OKAY SO THE AVALANCHE UNDRESSED THEM AND BROKE THEIR BONES AND SPRAYED THEM ALL WITH RADIATION COOL 😎 CASE CLOSED
@MDM19922 жыл бұрын
@@kavalogue he's probably catering to the masses of his viewers, 12 year olds who shouldn't even have phones let alone unhindered internet access, of course they aren't old enough to know/remember the facts of such an incident, so probably thought nobody would call it out.
@目は心の鏡2 жыл бұрын
I rarely click a video that quickly. This mystery lives rent free in my head and I think of it every time I hear anything remotely similar.
@whiteumbrella76612 жыл бұрын
The member of the group with the missing tongue had blood in her stomach, a fact that was discovered during her autopsy. The loss of the tongue happened while she was alive. She swallowed that blood, so that wasn't the result of post mortem animal predation.
@witchflowers69422 жыл бұрын
id like to know what amount of the tongue was severed and the nature of the injury that removed it, because that could give us a better picture of what happened. Edited to remove misconceptions.
@blarfroer80662 жыл бұрын
@@witchflowers6942 she was missing more than her tongue. but yeah, i don't believe in natural causes either.
@dragonssociety33712 жыл бұрын
It is possible to bite off your tongue during really bad accidents. You’re jaw is very strong and when you’ve been slammed into by a heavy weight (like a lot of snow) you’re brain can forget to safeguard from accidents like that. I dont know what the injury looked like, but that is a possible explanation.
@temeria19862 жыл бұрын
Not true, the medical report states a black, slimy substance, no mention of blood in her stomach.
@deaddropholiday2 жыл бұрын
It's worth remembering that all of the excised organs are known sinks for specific radionuclides. They were attempting to ascertain their full body burden of exotic radiation. The type yielded from nuclear accidents.
@xen0bia2 жыл бұрын
Concerning the radioactivity found on the clothes, I'd like to point out the pretty brutal Kyshtym disaster (3rd worst incident in the world after Chernobyl and Fukushima) which, in 1957 - 2 years prior to the Dyatlov Pass incident, irradiated part of the Ural region unbeknownst to everyone's knowledge, including police authorities (it took years to evacute affected villages). The incident took place near Chelyabinsk-40, a closed and unmarked city now known as Ozyorsk, at the secret nuclear facility of Mayak. Considering the expedition members studied in a city 2 hours north of Ozyorsk and considering, not only the Kyshtym incident, but also the extremely poor handling of nuclear wastes in the overall region, I think it's pretty safe to say the radioactive traces that were found are not a mystery whatsoever, even if we don't figure out the *exact* origin of it, it be from a covered up nuclear disaster or nuclear waste dumped in the envrionment or tools using radioactive elements. Soviet Russia irradiated its own land without a care in the world for decades, so I don't think this particular aspect needs as much attention as some people who may be ignorant of how things were back then (and really, still are today) may think it does.
@deaddropholiday2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. And several of the kids were part of the cleanup operations. As for the excised organs - they are all natural sinks for specific radionuclides. They were attempting to ascertain their full body burden of radioactivity - especially since they lacked young cadavers of people most at risk because of their rate of cell replication. The local cops blew the lid on the radiation testing and the missing organs. But they were completely ignorant of WHY they were testing (carried out by state security). Need to know and they didn't need to know.
@bacicinvatteneaca2 жыл бұрын
That would make it the second worst, not the third, because Fukushima didn't irradiate the surrounding area.
@deaddropholiday2 жыл бұрын
@@bacicinvatteneaca Yeah, that's why they were forced to dig up the topsoil from the entire region and dump it in open air pits using several hundred million garbage bags (all of which will likely have rotted by now). 🤣
@pamelabowden30172 жыл бұрын
One of the hikers had actually worked in a power plant which would explain the radiation
@deaddropholiday2 жыл бұрын
@@pamelabowden3017 All of these kids would have been hot with internal radionuclides. Indeed, everyone within several hundred square miles would likely have been exposed because of the Mayak incident. You can make a case that Mayak was the beginning of the nuclear medicine program in the Soviet Union (the same physicians would use what they learned in the Chernobyl catastrophe). Prior to this accident there had only been relatively small leaks of nuclear material and as the entire program was super secret nobody knew anything about them. The scale of the Mayak incident meant they couldn't just throw a blanket of security over the thing and cover up the casualties. And so the Soviet nuclear medicine program was kicked into gear. One of the problems they faced was a supply of young cadavers. They needed them to accurately determine what's known as "Full Body Burden" - the amount, intensity, type, spread patterns and specific locations of radionuclides throughout the body. Certain radionuclides bind to certain organs. Caesium to bones. Plutonium to the reproductive organs etc. Which explains the organ excision. The only reason there's a mystery about this is because the local cops were kept in the dark whilst the nuclear techs went about their grisly business.
@scaneagle622 жыл бұрын
Two of the group worked for a lab that worked with radiation and even found it on their clothes at home.
@gaarabucket2 жыл бұрын
Both hadn’t worked at said labs in over a year, two for one of them.
@nihlify2 жыл бұрын
@@gaarabucket small particles can be radioactive for years
@gaarabucket2 жыл бұрын
@@nihlify that’s fair. I do however believe that the radioactivity of small particles would hardly be noticeable. Especially since we literally all have small particles of radioactivity. Technically we experience radioactivity daily, so it would have had to be a noticeable amount.
@gaarabucket2 жыл бұрын
@@nihlify we are exposed to approximately 0.1 to 0.2 microsieverts of background radioactivity an hour, so to be noticeable it would need to be more and yet have to be below 4 sieverts which would kill you
@timfriday91062 жыл бұрын
the fucking lanterns had radioactive material in them...that's been a well-known and documented(solved) part of this story for a long ass fucking time...that wasn't even a real part of the mystery...just shit ppl been saying to keep up the hype about the wierdness. honestly....immediately people thought it was an avalanche, they just couldn't prove it because information on the particular type of avalanche wasn't well known/documented until somewhat recently... this was never really THAT big of a mystery...just one that hadn't been 'fully proven' yet. but very few people.
@jfobel2204 Жыл бұрын
My only concern with this theory is why then the Hikers, for some reason, thought it was a good idea to abandon the tent when there was so little snow actually on top of the tent. They could've easily worked together to just stand up and hold the tent over a couple to dress up, push the snow off the tent, then either dig somewhere after retrieving their warming gear to hold out for the night, or just move the tent. Additionally if they were concerned about the slope or the wind, why they stayed away from the woods, again, made no sense. Pleas of exhaustion and hysteria when it's a pure suicide mission to leave all of your warming layers in such frigid climate even when half asleep makes such little sense it would be more believable the hikers went there to die on purpose. I would know because even as a Boy Scout and sleeping outside in upwards of -20 degree weather, I slept in my warming layers inside my sleeping bag and was still cold, to the point I would put my boots back on because multiple sock layers didn't stop the wind cutting through. That was with modern tents with wind-breaker shields and an entire bottom layer of hay, and with a buddy in the tent for additional heat. Why they're not dressed but somehow survived this cold weather for so long again, makes absolutely no sense. Just because something on the surface looks plausible doesn't automatically write it off as true. Because common sense determined they should have under pressure done just fine. Why it magically disappeared overnight will never truly make sense.
@allanshpeley42845 ай бұрын
Hearing/feeling an avalanche could have been e3nough to throw them into a panic. Why would you wait in your tent to see if the avalanche will be large enough to bury you? I think another plausible scenario is the bomb testing they were doing in the area. That could have been enough to scare them into running away from it if they thought the bombs were landing nearby their tent.
@julesgosnell97912 жыл бұрын
I was thinking avalanche as soon as you mentioned "car-crash" injuries - it fits all the facts - you are curled up in your undies in a sleeping bag fast asleep when several tons of snow crushes your tent. In the ensuing darkness and panic, someone finds a knife and you somehow cut your way out from the inside of your tent, drag your friends out onto the slope and make for the shelter of the trees - because you are in your undies, your clothes are all buried, it's dark and the wind chill factor is going to kill you quite quickly. Some of you make it, some of you don't - plan is to go back at first light and dig out some clothes and provisions - but the survivors all freeze to death before morning. Perhaps they climbed the tree looking for a safe place to wait out til morning - are there bears/wolves around the pass ? Perhaps it was warmer out of the snow and in the shelter of the branches. Without knowing more about the missing tongue, we could even speculate that it wasn't the whole tongue missing but just the front - which you could easily bite off yourself if a couple of tons of snow hit you in the back of the head whilst your were asleep with it hanging out - ouch ! Perhaps some of them tried to gather wood and light a fire whilst others sought shelter in the crevasse...
@SoulDelSol2 жыл бұрын
Yup bit tongue off
@squirlmy2 жыл бұрын
I don't like the "undressing for bed" idea. This was Russia in winter, in the wilderness. They didn't have efficient insulation like "polar fleece", no efficient heating source, and probably didn't plan on bathing in a river or anything. I'd be surprised if they didn't plan to go to sleep in their clothing. I'm not sure of altitude, but it gets really cold at night in the mountains. It only makes sense with hypothermia. If stripping for bed made sense, it wouldn't have been a point of debate and discussion all these years.
@julesgosnell97912 жыл бұрын
@@squirlmy ok - let’s go with hypothermia then 😀
@kevw3332 жыл бұрын
@@SoulDelSol my thoughts exactly.
@xminusone12 жыл бұрын
The whole thing about the missing tongue was most probably because of scavenger animals. I've seen pictures of the bodies and she was also missing both of their eyes. Mostly due to scavenger or birds.
@BACKLIGHT2 жыл бұрын
I'd definitely recommend checking out LEMMiNO's video on the case if you're interested in learning more about it, it does a good job at proposing and supporting another possible theory. Great video as always Joe!
@theungulate2 жыл бұрын
I was going to comment this. Lemmino's interpretation is definitely my favorite. I honestly think the avalanche theory is reaching as it needs so much technical justification. The simpler option is that their gas stove in the tent wasn't venting properly, or otherwise malfunctioned, and they cut the tent in a panic.
@chillinwithaguitar99802 жыл бұрын
Come look to see what Australian life is like an to see What our animals look like. Hope to see you there 🐨🇭🇲
@temerityxd86022 жыл бұрын
@@theungulate Other videos have stated that the gas stove was not assembled so could not have been the cause.Bedtime stories did several videos on this and the last one presents a theory which is the one I find most plausible, basically the weather was calm when they set up the tent but during the night heavy winds (Katabatic winds) threatened to blow the tent down the slope with them in it. They then cut the tent open to escape before fleeing for the shelter of the trees and ultimately perishing.
@HagenMunsch2 жыл бұрын
@@temerityxd8602 and with the injuries that some of them had, wich would kill you in about minutes, they just walked some hundred meters ignoring they had to be dead already... Sounds legit.
@temerityxd86022 жыл бұрын
@@HagenMunsch They were uninjured when they left the tent. Once arriving at the treeline three of them including Dyatlov attempted to return to the tent but succumbed to hypothermia before reaching it, some of those remaining were able to start a small fire before two of them died with one of them potentially falling into or very near the fire causing the burns found on his body. The surviving four members went further into the forest looking for shelter, they found a crevice/small ravine and built a snow cave at the bottom. The snow cave then collapsed on top of them, causing the heavy injury's found. The bodies were then further damaged by animal predation and exposure to the elements.
@jessicaelliott98572 жыл бұрын
I have just watched a documentary called "an unknown compelling force" about this. Its definitely worth a watch . It shows the post mortem photos and reports, the hikers personal diaries and photographs.
@79Bobola Жыл бұрын
Yes THIS. I thought they did a good job laying out all the possible theories, ruling things out etc. What was the most interesting, is they proved the tent was open from the outside, something that everyone is misinformed about. Really is a game changer tbh.
@ZigguratYT2 жыл бұрын
I made a documentary on the Dyatlov incident last year and this is pretty much where I sit on it now too. I think it's one of those cases where every little detail has been analysed to such a degree that it's very easy to poke holes in the obvious theories while simultaneously taking massive leaps in logic to make something more exciting fit. It's such an intriguing mystery that I feel many people would rather it stays just that, even if they wouldn't admit it, which I do sympathize with to some extent.
@Messi10magic252 жыл бұрын
Did you come across what the explanation was for the footprints still being visible but the signs of the avalanche weren’t? I would just assume if there was enough time and snowfall to cover the avalanche there would also be enough time for the footsteps to be covered? Also I’m only assuming the footprints were even still visible bc it was said in the video, and I don’t have other knowledge of the subject to verify independently.
@smaakjeks2 жыл бұрын
@@Messi10magic25 Wind blows away loose and powdery snow, but footprints are more compacted and therefore more resistant to the wind. It's very common when hiking on popular trails in the winter to see old boot prints from previous hikers sticking up from the ground at windy spots. Seen it many times myself.
@Messi10magic252 жыл бұрын
@@smaakjeks Ah that makes sense. Thank you!
@smaakjeks2 жыл бұрын
@@Messi10magic25 No problem!
@asmodiusjones95632 жыл бұрын
@@smaakjeks yeah but not after an avalanche. Even the smallest of avalanches would wipe out footprints. I don’t buy the avalanche theory simply because no avalanche took place there. The tent was still mostly up. I believe it was a fire in the tent, which caused smoke and forced them to leave quickly. Actually, as an experienced mountain climber, there is basically nothing about the Dyatlov Pass incident that seems unusual to me. Every hiking disaster has some variation of these things - blunt force trauma from a fall, hypothermia, seemingly conflicting decision making. What do you think a “normal” hiking disaster is supposed to look like?
@dinoschachten2 жыл бұрын
I am impressed how well this case was investigated back in the day. It's often frustrating to look at such old incidents, accidents and cases due to no one caring enough to test X or evidence Y got lost later, but here it feels like someone really wanted to know what was going on - I mean testing hikers for radiation doesn't sound too common to me.
@chillinwithaguitar99802 жыл бұрын
Come look to see what Australian life is like an to see What our animals look like. Hope to see you there 🐨🇭🇲
@algorithmgeneratedanimegir12862 жыл бұрын
If the Russian authorities investigated this so thoroughly... I wonder if it was just an avalanche that killed them. The Soviet Union wasn't known for caring this deeply about dead folks.
@anhedonianepiphany55882 жыл бұрын
If you take into consideration the political environment of the time and the nature of some nearby highly secret facilities (involved with a major accident a few years earlier), then testing for radiation makes perfect sense.
@anhedonianepiphany55882 жыл бұрын
@@chillinwithaguitar9980 Have you taken it upon yourself to be our Ambassador of Tourism, or is this some kind of self-promotion?!? Anyway, have a good one, fella.
@chillinwithaguitar99802 жыл бұрын
@@anhedonianepiphany5588 yeah both we're going to be promoting Australia and Australian Wildlife as the world needs to see our beautiful land 🇭🇲
@beverlykrebs43722 жыл бұрын
I have been watching every documentary regarding this case that I come across. Been fascinated by this mystery since I was in my 30's, and I am now 62. There is something interesting that I never hear anyone address when discussing what could have happened. That is, there is an entry in the diary of one of the hikers which reads "At least we now know that the snowman is real" And there is a photo recovered from one of their cameras that shows a mysterious figure standing in an odd pose beside a tree. My question is - could there have been someone stalking them ? Someone they referred to as "the snowman" for whatever reason? And, if not, who was in the photo who looked large & dressed all in black so that you can't identify them in the photo? And who could the diary text have been referring to? Could "his" presence there have been connected to the strange lights in the sky? I don't really buy the whole avalanche theory, and because of the unanswered questions about the diary entry & the photo of the dark figure, I think there is more to the story. Besides, I do NOT trust the government. Why did they keep all of this in the dark for so many years. They were hiding something. I just don't know what, & we probably never will.
@Rebecca-fg7pp2 жыл бұрын
I can't remember where I saw it but I watched a documentary that claims they were in fact murdered by a hostile hunting party. They weren't Mansi but some other group, a group even the Mansi feared. It had forensic experts, former F.B.I. agents who had studied the case, ( as a hobby, not in any official capacity) and several Russian experts. It was very interesting and I thought they presented some strong evidence. They even had an expert show that the tent had been cut into not out of. I'm not sure how they died. Avalanche seems most likely but doesn't answer everything. We'll never know 100%. If my old brain ever gets to firing correctly and I remember the name of the show, I'll post it. I just find it nice to see someone who's as interested in this as I am.
@RamboTim2 жыл бұрын
if you have read every case you know the anwser my friend: their internal stove got fucked and they had to flee their tent in a hurry. This explains the burn markes, cutting from the inside, lack of clothing and EVERY other aspect of the case. The internet blew this one up... sorry to be the messenger.
@beverlykrebs43722 жыл бұрын
@@RamboTim This was a big mystery way before the internet. I knew about it in the 1970s & 80s. I don't think the stove theory explains everything, but it may be a factor for sure.
@dsoutherland17472 жыл бұрын
I have also been interested in this tragedy for many years, and consider that the diary entry and photo evidence shouldn’t be dismissed. Those two things were left out of this video. One more thing not mentioned - on the opposite side of the tent from the large cut outs, there were a few holes notched out. The theory for these is they could have been look-out holes for watching…(something). If I’m not mistaken, the Mansi knew about large creatures they called the Menk. Also, one pathologist stated that the crushed torsos were indicative of tremendous “squeezing.”
@gecko89482 жыл бұрын
There's a couple really good videos out there. One produced by Lemmino goes into quite a lot of depth, and a lot of their stuff has quite good production quality behind it
@MariaMartinez-researcher2 жыл бұрын
Yes, this kind of avalanche was treated about a year ago in the Ask a Mortician channel, where the situation of the undressed people was addressed too. The snow animations of the movie Frozen had to do with the solution.
@mickeydangerez2 жыл бұрын
How does it cause dead bodies to become radio active?
@MariaMartinez-researcher2 жыл бұрын
@@mickeydangerez The bodies weren't "radioactive," like in a glowing, drop dead around them fashion. They just had a tad more radioactivity than normal; if you research the subject, you'll find out that bananas and Brazil nuts and many regular things are also "radioactive." This video proposes the idea of some painting they used in their apparel contained radium; using radium in daily use objects was common at the time (hence the reference to the Radium Girls video, it's not a song, but a horrific case of criminally bad working conditions mixed with ignorance about what high radioactivity does); other comments here mention the hikers worked in studies about radioactive materials. And that's all about it. It's not aliens not some dark conspiracy. Buy a Geiger Counter and be amazed at how much radioactivity is there around you.
@kelliesaunders49052 жыл бұрын
I found it interesting that a slab avalanche is treated like it’s a new discovery. On a much, much smaller scale everyone knows about them. Think about metal roofs, there are snow guards installed sporadically along the edges of the roof to keep the snow/ice from sliding off the roof as one big sheet which is much more dangerous that having small chunks of snow/ice slide off. It was just surprising that the video approached this phenomenon as if researchers have never dealt with it or noticed that this happens sometimes.
@MariaMartinez-researcher2 жыл бұрын
@@kelliesaunders4905 I think it's because that kind of avalanche had not been considered as the possible cause of those hikers' death until recently. The case is very unusual, in a terrain flat enough as to make slab avalanches not an obvious occurrence, and no survivors to tell what happened. And, when rescuers arrived, no traces of the avalanche left. The type of avalanche is well known, but it took some time to signal it as the likely culprit in this case.
@kelliesaunders49052 жыл бұрын
@@MariaMartinez-researcher right on then. That’s an explanation I can go with. It did take me by surprise coming across as an event rarely heard of.
@davidchurch34722 жыл бұрын
Cases of paradoxical hypothermia undressing do NOT take their clothes back to the tent before returning to die elsewhere, they just drop them. It is NOT paradoxical undressing if they have been asleep in sleeping bags in their underwear and suddenly jumped up and rushed out of the tent without dressing first. Radiation contamination is not uncommon on nuckear physics students. Something made these experienced skilled snow hikers panic to get out of their tent without delaying to properly dress first. The question is, What?
@timokautto7349 Жыл бұрын
That is indeed the biggest question.
@luke33luke Жыл бұрын
The behaviour of the hikers became irrational. think about it: 1) they build a small deposit of provisions and they leave behind a pair of skis (there were no spare skis) that means that one of them walked one Km from the deposit to the tent. why? and the next morning that person had to walk back to the deposit to retrieve his skis? it makes no sense. 2) a ski stick was found cut in the tent. why? why would they do that. ? 3) suddenly they start cutting the canvas of the tent with knives. that canvas is NOT easy to cut, and they needed several attempts to finnaly cut it. there were many cuts along the tent, as if all of them started to cut their way out, ignoring the two exits on each side of the tent. why??? this makes no sense at all 4) they leave the tent, and they walk out without boots into the snow. without gloves, without shoes, without coats..... why? 5) they gather in a group and they walk downhill with 9 sets of footprints walking as if they were in a trance. why? 6) Only 2 of them had boots, the other 7 were barefoot or wearing socks (one had only one boot ). isn't that irrational? 7) NONE were wearing gloves. One of them had a pair of gloves in a pocket of his coat, but he did not use them. WHY ????? Everything started to go wrong in the STORAGE HOUSE. Suddenly they leave behind a pair of skis (remember they had no extra skis), and they make a wrong turn towards the Kholat Syakhl, 1500 meters away, instead of going to the mountain pass, which is the logical route. They took that wrong turn, eight of them in skis, and one of them walking. How is that possible? Why they didn't say: hey what are you doing? go pick your skis. Whatever happened, started in the Storage House, after that, it looks like they were in some kind of a trance, making strange uncomprehensible decisions My opinion is that they were under the influence of a hallucinating drug.They were university students, and had contact with other chemistry students. Maybe they took LSD and Meth. That is the only thing that can explain their irrational behavior. The official soviet autopsies reveal no drugs in the bodies. But I can imagine the soviet government censoring that fact. It was 1957. They could not reveal that 9 young soviet students were dead because of drugs. Drug use among young people was a characteristic of capitalist countries
@ZackZeysto2 жыл бұрын
I dont know why but everytime i get the flu or being sick i binge a lot of your videos. I watch you regularly but when im staying home and in bed i binge a whole bunch more haha
@StrawberryKitten2 жыл бұрын
No you dont lol
@damyr2 жыл бұрын
That's because only a sick person can binge watch him. He's too boring, too conservative, and doesn't stimulate imagination. The only benefit of watching him is that sometimes he talks about some odd cases which not many people heard about.
@peterwellnitz42202 жыл бұрын
@@damyr hating just to hate lmao
@damyr2 жыл бұрын
@@peterwellnitz4220 Hating? No. Just noticing. I'm subscribed, but I barely watch his videos. Tho, once in a blue moon he does make a good one.
@exMuteKid2 жыл бұрын
@@damyr you obviously are just looking for stimulating, meaningless material like tiktok or yt shorts, you don't have the brain capacity to be able to find enjoyment in just facts alone. Let me guess, you're looking for flashy editing, funny cuts, speculation of extraterrestrial and sci-fi stuff, ANYTHING as long as you don't have to use your hippocampus, you amygdala activation-craving Neanderthal. You have the right to an opinion, but your opinion is utter garbage, like your intellectual abilities based on that comment, dAmYr. You even liked your own comment, how pathetic
@CJM-rg5rt2 жыл бұрын
I listened to a similar story of mountain hikers mysteriously dying and it was especially horrifying because one girl survived to tell the tale. Somehow everyone got pulmonary edema at the same time and died violently and quickly. I'm no doctor or physicist so I don't know what conditions caused that or if they were present here but it's a horrible way to go and you'd definitely cut your way out of a tent if it happened to you or everyone around you.
@rfichokeofdestiny2 жыл бұрын
Do you have a link or some way to find out more about it?
@CJM-rg5rt2 жыл бұрын
@@rfichokeofdestiny Look up the Khamar Daban incident here on YT.
@rfichokeofdestiny2 жыл бұрын
@@CJM-rg5rt Thanks!
@Brett_Nebraska2 жыл бұрын
So in this case the survivor didn't know what the cause of the pulmonary edema was? It just randomly happened to everyone at once?
@Seth98092 жыл бұрын
@@Brett_Nebraska Weird.
@kellygreene657210 ай бұрын
There are several seriously big missing links in this avalanche theory that make it very improbable. Obviously Joe Scott isn't much of an outdoorsman or experienced in avalanches. Going by the description of evidence given in this case, the following should be considered... 1) An avalanche isn't going to cut (from the inside) people out of their tent and haul those individuals down the hill leaving their tent where they pitched it on the hillside. 2) This wasn't a case of paradoxical undressing due to hypothermia as their clothes weren't scattered around but had been left in their tent along with their shoes. 3) Evidence of their tracks were found at the site. A slab avalanche would have wiped out track imprints that had been left in the snow. 4) A person in good enough condition to shimmy up a tree in their underwear certainly would have been in good enough condition to hike back up to their tent to get their clothes and some gear. 5) Slab avalanches leave a debris field. Of slabs if nothing else. These debris fields are often the last remnants left when the snow thaws. They just don't disappear in a few days or weeks. I could list more inconsistencies but I think you get my drift.... 30+ years of being in SAR tells me the claim of an avalanche as the culprit in this event is like trying to shove a square peg in a round hole.
@itar10n2 жыл бұрын
The radioactivity did come from their equipment, specifically the lanterns they had. Gas mantle camping lanterns like those made by Coleman had thorium based gas mantles, which are radioactive. You gestured vaguely at the concept of radioactive gear, and I just wanted to offer more detail as to what that radioactive gear probably was.
@ericalbers48672 жыл бұрын
I always assumed the radiation was from their lamps. The socks you put on propane camping lamps have thorium on them. At least they used to. As we know thorium is radioactive. In fact it was the original girl for reactors until the uranium rush during WWII and after. And of course it's being looked into again currently.
@kaylafrost42212 жыл бұрын
As for the tents being cut instead of zipped… isn’t it possible it was just so dark they couldn’t see the zipper? If the tent was in an avalanche, maybe it was tossed upside down and they figured it would just take less time (panicked and injured) to cut the way out? Idk makes sense to me
@pamelabowden30172 жыл бұрын
If there were katakan winds, the tent may have been literally crushed with the force and with the group trapped inside, suffocating. There only escape would have been to cut themselves out.
@richardknott4626 Жыл бұрын
@@pamelabowden3017 Good point. I have long favored the winds as the most likely cause.
@BRAINimplantSLAVERY2 ай бұрын
@@pamelabowden3017CULPRIT: KGB BEHAVIOR: BRAIN IMPLANTS INJURIES: ENERGY WEAPONS 100% CORRECT
@danielbible36542 жыл бұрын
If they got buried in an avalanche and then cut their way out of the tent, why did they run off into the woods in their underwear and separate after it was over? Things still do not make sense to me
@DIABETOR Жыл бұрын
I really liked Lemmino’s theory where essentially, one of the guys on the expedition had a homemade stove and chimney in the tent and it malfunctioned and filled the tent with smoke, thus dazing and confusing everybody and caused a panic, leading them to flee and die of exposure
@AndrewGribben Жыл бұрын
Same, loved the Lemmino theory!
@princeamongmen7064 Жыл бұрын
Apparently they had not unpacked the stove on the last fateful night in question, plus it wouldn’t explain why they walked away some barefooted and mostly underdressed over a kilometre from their only shelter, I believe they were terrified buy something I know I would have to be really scared to walk away from my tent at night without fetching my boots, clothes and keys to my motorcycle😂
@ctswag42042 жыл бұрын
I had heard on one Dyatlov Pass "explanation" video that the radioactive clothes belonged to two of the men in the group that worked in a factory or some sort of facility where they would have made contact with radioactive material. So that explains that.
@nathanielreik66173 ай бұрын
They were at the site of the Kyshtym disaster which was the third worst nuclear disaster and actually released more radiation than Chernobyl (Chernobyl is considered worse than Kyshtym because more people were affected by where the radiation ended up) and at the time they didn't understand the effects of radiation quite as well so they didn't decontaminate their clothing.
@ditzieluv2 жыл бұрын
I love that you follow up on your old videos when new information is found. This was fascinating! Thank you for the wonderful variety of topics and the entertaining way you share the information. Love your videos!!
@timfriday91062 жыл бұрын
this one is pretty late though...to be fair. I read the article talking about this being solved like...over a year ago, when I first came across joe's video on it and wanted to see if there was any update, and there was. =P
@kavalogue2 жыл бұрын
No new information found tho. So what the hell are you and everyone else talking about. This guy really knows his fan base. Knew ye knew nothing about this incident and took full advantage. Large parts of the internet have been following this extremely close for decades.
@chillinwithaguitar99802 жыл бұрын
Come look to see what Australian life is like an to see What our animals look like. Hope to see you there 🐨🇭🇲
@nehukybis2 жыл бұрын
My father was a platoon commander in 'Nam. I still have the compass he was issued in training, and the warning on the casing says it contained 75 mcg of Tritium. The half-life of Tritium is 12.3 years and it's at least sixty years old, so I guess it's no longer a radiation hazard.
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
Half life means it's expended half of its radioactivity in that time. It's still half again as radioactive as it ever was after that though. It's kind of like the question how long does it take a bear to get out of his cave if he walks halfway out every day? The answer is he never makes it out. It's a half, then a half of that half, etc.
@GateKeeper362 жыл бұрын
So it's official that the picture of the man or bigfoot lurking behind a tree is real. My question is why didn't that picture alarm the crew. Whoever took the picture should have been worried cause up in the cold mountain. A encounter with a man that's acting suspicious lurking behind a tree isn't normal. Why would they keep pushing forward when they know a strange man or bigfoot is close behind them or the possibility that it left after being seen by the photographer. I've seen this case tons of time on KZbin and they never focus around the man or bigfoot following them. They just talk about the crime scene and each person's death but I believe it was either the stalker or the environmental where they chose to stop and camp. That spot could have been radioactive and to be on a high level of radiation could be painful and drive them insane. Than the stalker arrives punching one in the chest, ripping out a tongue for a meal later. That's my explanation on the case.
@tippyc22 жыл бұрын
Tritium isnt supposed to be hazardous as long as its contained. You definitely don't want to break the vials though and breathe it.
@howdareyouexist2 жыл бұрын
@@tippyc2 actually you do, it is good for you
@paavobergmann49202 жыл бұрын
@@1pcfred So its more than 4 halflives, so there is less than 1/16 of the initial activity left. That should be pretty safe, at least a lot safer than it used to be.
@tylerindersmith54802 жыл бұрын
I learn so much stuff from you, much of it I never knew how much I needed to know it till you bring it up.
@lachezarkrastev71232 жыл бұрын
The only mystery is how some of them are found crashed in the ravine, two are frozen naked and the rest of them freeze to death in attempt to climb back to the camp. There is a theory for heavy snow which started to crash the tent, so they cut from inside to escape and may be then the avalanche hit them ... who knows it had to be a hell of a crazy messy situation.
@lizzieplumlee60772 жыл бұрын
I've watched every documentary I cud possible find on this case bc it's so fascinating ...NOTHING that I've read so far explains everything that happened to them...
@laytonvosloo33112 жыл бұрын
Hi Joe. Regarding the radioactivity; a far more likely scenario is thorium gas lantern mantles. These become quite brittle and make a fine dust. Even though they are not very radioactive, the dust will still be easily detectable above background levels. Obviously an avelache would easily break the lantern's glass casing. Thank you
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
In Soviet Russia lantern lights you!
@jamesknapp642 жыл бұрын
2 of the hikers worked at nuclear power industry so could just be risdual from taking their cloths to work.
@gkess71062 жыл бұрын
It was from their jobs.
@chillinwithaguitar99802 жыл бұрын
Come look to see what Australian life is like an to see What our animals look like. Hope to see you there 🐨🇭🇲
@billlansdell72252 жыл бұрын
There are a number of problems with this theory. Firstly, part of digging down into the snow where you pitch your tent, is testing the snow to see if it's prone to avalanche. They would have been well aware of slab avalanches, know what conditions in the snow cause it, and would have been testing for it. They wouldn't have JUST been looking for a flat area. Secondly, you can see from the scene that there was no evidence of avalanche. An avalanche is actually the most obvious theory, and the reason this is a mystery in the first place is that there is no evidence of it. A slab avalanche requires old, compacted hard snow to make the slab. This will not just melt away or blow away in the wind. Thirdly, the tent showed signs that before they cut their way out, they cut slits for viewing. Lastly, paradoxical undressing isn't fairly common, it's fairly rare. We just have lots of examples of it because an awful lot of people die of hypothermia. If one of them exhibited paradoxical undressing, it would be an anomaly. But for most of them to exhibit it stretches credulity.
@youngfreshsandwitch5 ай бұрын
The real problem for me is even if, EVEN IF they suffered an avalanche why on earth would it force you away from your camp ground? I have a truly hard time believing that in the event of an avalanche the panic is so extreme these experienced hikers decided to abandon their injured comrades and run NAKED into the pitch black wilderness
@koolerking4402 жыл бұрын
Still doesn’t make any sense. If it was a slap avalanche, they would’ve been taken away in the tent. But the tent never moved. And they left the tent in a weird way, (is it quicker to find a knife and cut your way out or just use the door?!). They left clothes folded in the tent. The tent was the warmest place to be, so why worked they have left it due to hypothermia?! And even if they did take their clothes off due to hypothermia you generally just throw them wildly, you don’t fold them up. Now, you could argue if you forget the above, they’re now out of the tent, they walk down towards the river and trees and slap avalanches hits them and that’s how they get injured, and some climb a tree, but now this is a slap avalanche that’s started below the tent, and yet again, doesn’t touch the tent. 🤷♂️
@victoriapowers56282 жыл бұрын
I'm an avid follower of the Daytlov Pass mystery. Thank you for the follow up with such detail. However, I'd like to add that there is evidence that is not presented as often that I didn't hear you address,. A camera was found at the tent site and when developed two pictures stood out. One was of bright circlular lights low to the ground and the other shows a figure standing near the tree line siome distance away. No one has been able to explain these photos. I think these are important evidence to include when talking about this mystery.
@tomcat88492 жыл бұрын
Like I've been telling in here they in countered a Sasquatch. And they are Big real and outclass us human beings.
@whatthefridge1o12 жыл бұрын
Maybe the white things are snow that are our of focus
@Dorsidwarf2 жыл бұрын
How would a figure standing near a tree line be inexplicable? Just a badly-exposed photo of one of the team right?
@Spunney2 жыл бұрын
No one has been able to explain how they were able to take a picture of a human being in a forest. It cannot be explained. It is much more likely that it is an alien.
@kalodawg8297 Жыл бұрын
One of the member's diaries even has a comedic message like "Now we know who the real Snowman is", as if joking about one of the friends photobombing and looking like a snownan
@nateodger24922 жыл бұрын
Yes, some of them paradoxically undressed in the tent and then they all went for a nice walk outside and stayed there until they died. Staying outside naked is much better than digging out your clothes from your mostly intact tent, right?
@timokautto7349 Жыл бұрын
Of course, that is what I do all the time when hiking in the cold.
@FireDude132 жыл бұрын
Oddly enough... it was a Disney movie that helped with figuring out the slab avalanche theory. A computer simulation program that created some of the sliding snow animations in the movie Frozen was so realistic it was used to recreate the conditions on the night of the incident. And those simulations concluded that it was entirely feasible (and probable) that a slab avalanche was the smoking gun. Occam's Razor... lol
@foetaltreborus20172 жыл бұрын
It's always amazing in "modern times" how these mysteries still happen...
@thomaswalsh4552 Жыл бұрын
So a few things: 1. Of the two members with radioactive clothing, one worked with radioactive materials at the polytechnic school, and the other worked at a nuclear plant. The levels of radiation match this kind of exposure. 2. Another theory has been put forward for the cut tent and minimal clothing: their stove. To use a stove in a tent, you need a chimney. For the stove they had, if the chimney was set up improperly it could have funneled wind into the stove rather than smoke out, spraying hot ash and dust into the tent, causing darkness, disorientation, and panic. This would likely have lead to cutting open the tent in order to find a way out of the hot choking ash. Due to the suddenness of the incident, there would have been no time to get properly dressed. Paradoxical undressing could also have set in at this point, exacerbated by the already lacking clothing. 3. The missing tongue (and other facial bits, iirc) was also consistent with the body starting to decompose in water, as matches the bottom of the ravine. 4. The impact injuries could also have plausibly happened due to falling in said ravine.
@MichaelOKC2 жыл бұрын
How many times have I seen Hello Fresh sponsored segments on other creators channels? Alot! This is only the second one that I have watched all the way through, just because I like Joe's delivery! Ryan George is the only other creator that I Don't skip most sponsored segments!!
@arthurdent92812 жыл бұрын
Same here! Good transition, and it was funny :)
@amberb1352 жыл бұрын
These are my favorite videos that you do Joe. Love the mysteries!!
@bunglebee1790 Жыл бұрын
If that's really the picture of the tent as the searchers found it, why are the skis etc. still standing upright if a mini avalanche hit the site? If not for the snow, why would they calmly leave the tent but without shoes or even socks? They would have known that's a death sentence in those conditions so why leave the place where the equipment is that would at least give them a fighting chance? There's much better info on this elsewhere. This report is pretty sloppy.
@davidd61712 жыл бұрын
Loved the video, Joe! Your promo section of the video was super funny! Keep up the great work man!
@bootleg_242 жыл бұрын
I think LEMMiNO's theory is really plausible and makes a lot of sense, and that came out about 6 years ago
@fajaradi12232 жыл бұрын
That dude production quality is very good. But the frequency tho ...
@More_Row2 жыл бұрын
@@fajaradi1223 that’s why they are good… the frequency. It takes effort
@joshuapatrick682 Жыл бұрын
So Ive never been more terrified of vague descriptions than I am with the term “compelling force “
@aaronssweetstuff66662 жыл бұрын
If you learn the names of the hikers ,their experience and the individual injuries it becomes more compelling that something other than an avalanche happened for instance one the hikers had marks on his hands that are common in fist fights another may have bitten his hand to stiffle a cry
@79Bobola2 жыл бұрын
There’s also a very recent docu, where the guy was able to view the original tent, and along with several other people, came to the conclusion that it was actually torn from the outside. That’s a game changer right there.
@aaronssweetstuff66662 жыл бұрын
@@79Bobola no kidding that would chance the entire context of the incident, in my mind the most likely thing is weapons testing there was a lot this video didn't mention like the "unknown compelling force " comment etc.
@kleckas20172 жыл бұрын
@@79Bobola interviewed one of the people who found the tent and he said that he and his friend cut the tent to see what inside
@lucaskroes95922 жыл бұрын
Experts were doubtful that an avalanche could occur in that area, it wouldn't surprise me if the group underestimated the avalanche risk and got caught out. Marks around the knuckles are not uncommon when hiking outdoors (in winter)
@Spunney2 жыл бұрын
Maybe they hard marks on their hand because they were trying to do a satantic ritual! Or maybe getting scuffed up is just a thing that happens in the wilderness. It's kinda pointless to speculate about something so trivial
@Kindlesmith70 Жыл бұрын
Nice. Theories tested, and proved plausible. Accidents, and laziness happen no matter the skill of people. Just have a look at how many expert divers, or cavers doing their jobs end up failing. Even doctors screw up. Expertise doesn't eliminate simple failures. Now I just wish someone to go into those forests where people have 'teleported' / disappeared like in the 411 Missing cases, as well as make a return to the Skinwalker Ranch.
@0zmose2 жыл бұрын
Gonna call bulshit on the avalanche theory. The main reason (and by far the most damning) they said it couldn't have been an avalanche, is because all of their skis and poles were still standing upright when they found the tent. You can clearly see them in the photos. Convenient how that got left out of their "study". I've studied this incident thoroughly, and there's a lot of other unexplained aspects, but I'm not going to sit here and write a novel.
@williamhogancamp77162 жыл бұрын
I really love ya Joe. You are entertaining and informative as are your other viewers. Who knew gas lantern sleeves/mantles were doused in radioactive thorium dioxide? I do have some lingering questions regarding the Dyatlov Pass Mystery. The tent was found standing, propped up sturdily with poles, ropes, and skis. Seems like a slab avalanche would easily take that down and move it especially if the avalanche was caused by cutting a platform for the tent. Also much of the clothes were found inside the tent which seems an unlikely location for paradoxical undressing. Also, I could not find how many of the 9 were undressed but paradoxical undressing occurs in less than half of those who die from hypothermia. So if all 9 had only socks and skibbies, that would be weird.
@anhedonianepiphany55882 жыл бұрын
Actually, it is, and was, common knowledge that such mantles contain thorium, particularly amongst the educated. You should explore the East Urals radioactive trace for the far more likely answer to the “radiation mystery”.
@kavalogue2 жыл бұрын
Who knew? Hundreds or thousands. Possibly millions of people for years on end.
@Seth98092 жыл бұрын
A lot of the other people pointed out that people get very wet while hiking in snow, and tons of people said they took off clothing in their tents to let it dry. It's possible they panicked or suffered paradoxical undressing while inside the tent, and then the irrational behavior afterward is just easily explained by paradoxical undressing.
@ThinkerThunker Жыл бұрын
LOL .... so an avalanche hit them and killed some of them - but left their camp intact - so they cut their way out of the back and their tents and "calmly" walked away, heading in different directions - AND ... some of them left all their clothes, coats, boots and gear back at camp and froze to death...? Why didn't you just go with "swamp gas" got them.
@gamertardguardian12992 ай бұрын
1. Avalanches can easily bury equipment. Their camp was not intact, but it was located in one spot and could be easily re built. 2. That can be explained a few ways. Most of the group was outside of the tent, doing something nearby. The few stuck in the tent cut out of the tent in order to look for their best friends who were probably dying, just trying to find them. 3. He literally explained that in the video, not going to explain again why they would walk outside naked, its very normal for people experiencing hypothermia and near death.
@niteslaya2 ай бұрын
Their tent was not buried under avelanche, it was easily found by the search party, there is pictures from first responders on google. There were was only small slits cut in the tent to peek through. Gamertard sums it about right.
@timokautto7349 Жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for this interesting video. Just some comments here. Some... The net picture 2.18: Anybody who know something about snowy conditions, notices immediately that the tent was not like this when they found it. The expedition party had done at least some digging. How much, we don't know. With any wind, the snow won't stay in that kind of sharp formations on the tent - that is impossible. In the pic it looks rather like somebody had stamped on the tent. That fact is very unfortunate - we don't really know what the tent looked like when it was found. Paradoxical undressing makes no sense: they did not remove their clothes in the cold - they left almost all of their warm gear by the tent when they were certainly not hypothermic. So, wearing only underwear was not due to any paradoxical undressing. They had little to undress, really. And those found trying to get back to the tent, had all more than underwear. Slab avalanche is good - its very very nice. But it explains little, or nothing. And, if we believe the tent pic, it never happened: the tent was still standing, 2 weeks later. It is easy to make up half a dozen plausible causes for panic in the tent, but none of them explains the fact they did not return minutes or some dozens of minutes later to, at least, get their life saving gear from the tent and around it. If the tent stayed there with no damage, as it appeared to, any intelligent creature would have gone back there asap to take warm clothes, food, axe and what not. If we assume that the escape from the tent towards the forest really took place, then there seemed to be something by the tent, that appeared to be worse than death. They bruised and cut their skin in order to climb a tree and gain sight towards the tent, but they never deared to approach it - before it was far too late. That is the question, the mystery: why did they abandon the only safe place they knew and chose a near certain death instead? In what kind of situation a sane person leaves the warm tent with no shoes? If there is an avalanche, you surely run - but if you then notice it was a false alarm, you come back and at least take ALL you necessary gear to survive. The tent seemed to be there, standing, did it not? If there is smoke in that safe haven, U get rid of the smoke and go back to sleep. If there is a dangerous animal, you fight, and then go back to sleep. No idiot will leave the tent in a freezing cold blizzard, and these people were no idiots. So, lets not "find answers" if there is none.
@richardknott4626 Жыл бұрын
Excellent observations. Something compelled them to decide that leaving the tent without taking the time to gather adequate clothing was a better option than to remain at the tent. Not sure when the catastrophic injuries occurred: while in the tent? at the ravine where the bodies were found? If in the tent, then I suspect the karman vortex street most. They had to leave to avoid more injuries, and would return when the wind died down. Some did try to return.
@timokautto7349 Жыл бұрын
@@richardknott4626 Yes, they had to leave, or they were made to leave. I for one have not been able to make my mind up.
@TBolivar2 жыл бұрын
That mystery has always fascinated me. The avalanche hypothesis always seemed to me one of the most implausible -- and I don't see any change coming from this 'new evidence'. For instance, 1) Why would you cut through the canvas from the inside, or, even more baffling, poke several holes through it? I mean, how much easier would that be than simply using the proper opening? If you're buried in snow, but sufficiently all right in order to be able to grab your tools and so on, wouldn't at least one of those very experienced hikers say something like "hold on, I'm close to the door, lets unzip it or whatever and work our way out through here? 2) The tent, however, didn't look a bit like anything that had been buried in snow if the pictures from the rescue team are accurate. I'm not just talking about the fact it was not found under any crushing snow (which could have melted, ok) but the poles were all in place etc. If the so-called 'avalanche' left the tent in that almost pristine state, minus the cuts from the inside, then I guess even my fridge could have done a scarier job. 3) Why-oh-why would, again, VERY EXPERIENCED HIKERS or just anyone, really, with a pair of working neurons, come up with the brilliant idea of walking away from the tent into the freezing darkness -- into oblivion -- without even taking the time to 'fish' up their boots and heavy jackets instead of just working to free the tent from the supposed snow that had buried it? "Hey, lads, let's dress up everyone and dig this free; come on, we are many, it will take just five minutes". "Nah... Let's just walk very slowly in socks and T-shirts that way over there. Can't see where I'm pointing at? No problem, let's just spread and go stargazing anywhere in this rich -50° weather"... To mention just a few incongruous points.
@kin2naruto2 жыл бұрын
Head injury explains all the irrational behavior unfortunately well. The real mystery is where the head injury came from.
@Seth98092 жыл бұрын
Found the person who doesn't understand paradoxical undressing. You're expecting people who are burning alive and on fire, to very slowly do things.
@Imperiused2 жыл бұрын
My favorite theory is the stove smoking them out of their tent. Explains why they would have resorted to cutting their way out, and why they would not have immediately returned, and their state of undress. And the fact that many of them may have been more or less drunk at the time was basically a death sentence in the freezing cold.
@TerrinX2 жыл бұрын
A fellow Lemino fan
@MrFerrari458gto2 жыл бұрын
I thought they never lit the stoves?
@TerrinX2 жыл бұрын
@@MrFerrari458gto Check out Lemino's video from a few years ago
@TheFreeBass2 жыл бұрын
This is just ridiculous. These weren't bored kids out for a weekend in a park 2 miles from home. Why the hell would they trash their shelter in the middle of nowhere in freezing temperatures because of a little smoke? Likewise, anyone experienced with ANY kind of winter conditions knows that alcohol is NOT your friend. I find it hard to believe that an experienced group of winter hikers settled down for the night & got shitfaced. And to top off the alcohol point, I'm sure that if that were the case it would have been one of the first facts released w/ any autopsy report.
@TerrinX2 жыл бұрын
@@TheFreeBassIt's patch black, you just woken up startled, coughing unable having trouble breathing, eyes stinging, nose burning, barely able to scramble yourself upright amongst everyone else around you. Trying to get out of the front end of the tent to fresh air but failing either by not knowing which direction it is (this would be a very confusing moment) or simply not being able to reach it with everyone else in the way; etc. The smoke is insufferable, and no one can breathe, so after managing to find your knife you cut open the tent and everyone scrambles out to breathe some fresh air. This is where the trouble starts. I can't guarentee this is anything close to what actually happened but it would make sense either way. Lemino's video makes a very good case for the burner stove hypothesis (also; it is confirmed by the autopsy reports that some of them were intoxicated)
@runswithbears35172 жыл бұрын
It still doesn't quite explain why they were naked? If they got covered by an avalanche, you'd imagine they weren't yet hypothermic when it happened, yet they chose not to bring their clothes from the tent? Were they already hypothermic when the avalanche woke them up?
@ossiantansley65832 жыл бұрын
A note about the radioactive clothes: Certain gas lamps have radioactive torium dioxide in the gas mantle, some of that could have gotten on their clothes if the lamp broke in the avalanche.
@richardmyhan33692 жыл бұрын
ok, not big on in-video adds, but that transition was pretty darned good. also, really enjoyed the video overall. I hadn't heard about the newer study, so I actually learned something new. 😀
@macwinter710111 ай бұрын
So the proposal is that a slab avalanche went over them while they were in a tent with enough force to cause severe physical injuries? The question I have that nobody is addressing is how could they have possibly gotten out of the tent if they were covered by an avalanche with enough weight and force to crush their skulls and internal organs? Wouldn't they have been buried by deep snow at that point? Also, why was the tent relatively stable? Wouldn't that force of snow knock it over or flatten it? I'm not saying there must've been some unusual cause. But I just don't see how people would get hit by an avalanche while in a tent and then casually walk out of the seemingly undamaged tent and go start a fire in the forest just to die of hypothermia. Or is everyone just using misleading wording? Are people trying to say these people left the tent and then were hit later by a slab avalanche? Because it seems like people are saying they were hit while laying down in the tent, which makes absolutely no sense.
@FLS962 жыл бұрын
Two points and a question: - I think the reason they used the knife to open the tent could be if the zipper was frozen that night and wouldn't open, and were in panic - I've read somewhere that the radioactivity was do to some of the hikers working with radioactive materials - If the reason was avalanche alone, it sure didn't hit them. I mean, if it did, wouldn't they be covered in snow? What about the footprints? There must've been more to this, I'm pretty sure they would have returned to the tent and patched the cut after the avalanche was over
@FFNOJG2 жыл бұрын
There is also thorium in old Coleman lanterns! it's in the little glove sock things that burn in the lantern! the slab probably broke the lantern and pushed the thorium out. Now it's not just Coleman specific, but many old lanterns. when I worked at a local nuke plant that was one of the first thing they put a geiger counter, and showed me first hand (as an example of things being radioactive that you wouldn't think, or guess)
@suncat5302 жыл бұрын
many of the people were actually covered in snow, both a few weeks after the incident, and a few months after it. Keeping in mind that calculated day of when they camped there was 1st of February, and the first body was found around 26 of February, so amount of snow there is probably not a clear cut "100% caused by avalanche" case either. the footsteps were found only part of the way to the first set of bodies, the rest 'got covered in deeper snow' - so it seems probable that that specific patch of snow wasn't touched by the avalanche. > I'm pretty sure they would have returned to the tent ... after the avalanche was over even without the avalanche hitting any of them: Some clothes were left in the camp itself, and footsteps indicated that some people were in socks or barefoot, and where clothes were still on people, some of those had signs of previously being taken from other campers post mortem. If they were awoken by avalanche sounds during the night, it would make sense that they were not wearing appropriate clothing while they were trying to get to safety away from the camp. If it was still dark, it could've added uncertainty to whether they could get back to the camp after the avalanche in time. Maybe they even tried to stay the night in snow near the campfire, or just spent enough time in the cold waiting for the sound to pass and figuring out what to do, that many of them were already doomed to freeze to death.
@bunkertons2 жыл бұрын
This is fascinating! I'm glad to hear the avalanche theory is gaining ground.
@laughablelarry92432 жыл бұрын
It's just a theory. Always remember that. No matter how much you want it to be true, doesn't make it so.
@VosperCDN2 жыл бұрын
@@laughablelarry9243 Which also applies to those wanting it to be some weird phenomenon or alien event. Sometimes, the simple answer is the answer. (Occam's razor, basically the best explanation of any phenomenon is the one that makes the fewest assumptions.)
@79Bobola2 жыл бұрын
@@VosperCDN it doesn’t have to be aliens or Bigfoot for it NOT to be caused by an avalanche?!? Not sure why people think that if you disagree with the avalanche theory, you must be some conspiracist, it’s asinine.
@scarlett8782 Жыл бұрын
this is all well and good, but I have a couple of problems... when the rescuers found the scene, the tent was above the snow and perfectly visible. in fact, the broken down tent simply looked like it had been snowed on over the last several days. the tent was not buried in snow, which would be consistent with a slab avalanche. you can see a picture of the way the tent was found by clicking on the wikipedia article above. you can clearly see the tent above the snow. how would a massive slab avalanche which supposedly hit the tent and its occupants with enough force to cause injuries that are consistent with a high speed car crash leave the entire tent uncovered for investigators to find even weeks later after multiple additional snowfalls? moreover, the hikers ran nearly an entire mile away in their underwear knowing it was certain death in order to hide in the woods nearby... over an avalanche that wasn't even big enough to cover their tent?? it takes the average person 8 to 11 minutes to run a mile on even well paved terrain. to run a mile in ankle deep snow on the side of a mountain?? they must have continued to travel that mile down toward the woods in bare feet knowing they were freezing to death for 20 minutes or more due to the rough terrain inhibiting the speed of their travel on foot... so a small avalanche happens in a split second, which is not even big enough to cover their tent, yet somehow has enough force to deliver life threatening injuries to some but not all of the hikers, then they cut their tent open and run/hike in bare feet toward the woods nearby for 20 minutes or more after the avalanche was over, and during that 20 minutes or more no one ever thought to turn around and get their clothing or gear... why keep traveling away from the tent for SO long after the avalanche was over? even if there is a risk of another avalanche, that's just a risk. staying out in the cold is 100% death. I would have immediately turned around and gone back to the tent to retreive my clothing and gear when it was clear that the avalanche was over (which should have been clear within 2-3 minutes) to increase my chances of survival. why keep running/hiking away from the tent for 20 minutes or more? it just doesn't make sense to me.
@cheerful_crop_circle7 ай бұрын
So they were running from a creature?
@DellaMcClare88882 жыл бұрын
Another point about the radiation, the brand of camping lamps found in their gear was known to be mildly radioactive. They thought the technology was safe at the time but around the 2000's it was discovered those types of lamps were a radiation hazard, nobody connected it back to Dyatlov pass initially but I've seen it mentioned in the last few years on some blogs.
@nathanielreik66173 ай бұрын
Also only two of them had clothing that was irradiated, and those two had been at the site of the Kyshtym disaster which was the third worst nuclear disaster and released more radiation than Chernobyl (Chernobyl is considered worse because more people were effected due to where the radiation went) and they didn't understand the dangers quite as well at the time so many of the workers never decontaminated their clothing.
@Worldopain2 жыл бұрын
I've watched many videos of people going all the way out there for them selves. There is nowhere for an avalanche to start.. It's not steep anywhere. Nope. I don't believe it.
@ThisCanNotBTheFuture2 жыл бұрын
Maybe I glossed over it, but another mystery was supposed to have been that their footprints were consistent with normal walking, not panicked running. Was that just BS from the initial 1959 report?
@w0rt4x Жыл бұрын
They found skis in upfront position stuck into the snow by the tent. Just saying.
@steelfabric2 жыл бұрын
Dyatlov Pass and the Somerton Man kinda sorta done. Would be great to get more info on the Isdal Woman and that guy in Ireland (can't remember the moniker given to him).
@jamesknapp642 жыл бұрын
Mr Bergman. And according to a German podcast they stated his family contacted authorities and has been identified, but they wish to keep him anonymous and the Irish authorities have acknowledged this.
@steelfabric2 жыл бұрын
@@jamesknapp64 Thanks for the update.
@RH-xs8gz Жыл бұрын
The avalanche theory begs a question. Why would the Soviet government attempt to, or at least seem to attempt to cover up a natural cause like an avalanche?
@wlittle89082 жыл бұрын
Ive heard my grandmother talk about this several times throughout the years when i was young and like others, she had her theories. Im 56 now and this video has me wondering again what happened to these people. Great video.
@jaakpotts2 жыл бұрын
Please, please share her theories! I would love to read that. I find this subject fascinating.
@thebigpicture20322 жыл бұрын
Avalanche is most plausible. Cut out, run for your life. Everything buried so no choice but try surviving the night. Two groups, two different theories on how to survive.
@jaakpotts2 жыл бұрын
@@thebigpicture2032 I’m interested in hearing what others thought about it at the time, like grandma’s stories. It’s easy to do theories about it now, but I’m looking for what was going through peoples thoughts back then.
@RobertaTMS_2 жыл бұрын
That would be interesting too. I'd like to know.
@ginag62092 жыл бұрын
I would be cool with the avalanche theory if it wasn’t for a few things-the scavenger theory, the fact that no one was trapped in the tent, and the strange injuries. Why would scavengers just stop at eyes and a tongue???? Wouldn’t they have bitten other parts of the bodies too? Or if they only could get to the eyes and tongue, why did none of the other bodies get attacked as well? And why were the injuries consistent with getting hit by a car, not visible from the outside of the bodies? If something heavy enough to cause such damage falls on people causing crushing injuries, you’d see at least some of the damage from the outside, would you not? And how were these injured people able to run from the tent? Even with an adrenaline rush, I don’t see them getting as far as they were eventually found with those kind of injuries. But even allowing that they somehow were able to sustain such injuries inside the tent, get up and run away, it still leaves too many unanswered questions that just aren’t explained by an avalanche so benign that everyone made it out of the tent. If this were the case, why wouldn’t they dig their supplies out, or salvage what they could and try to set up another camp? Was the snow so deep they couldn’t reach it? If that’s the case, again, how were they all able to get out the tent? They surely knew that they had no chance of living in the woods without proper clothing or gear. It seems implausible that they wouldn’t even try to salvage items without a damn good reason that made taking their slim chances in the woods over returning to the tent a good idea or their only option. I’d risk getting caught in another avalanche to gather what I could, knowing there was zero chance of surviving otherwise. Sorry, while I have no idea what could have made them flee the tent and never return, I just don’t buy this theory.
@richardknott4626 Жыл бұрын
I think you ask really good questions. I doubt the avalanche too for the same reasons. Something had to threaten the hikers enough at the tent with the stove's heat to make moving to the trees in the life-threatening cold without adequate clothing seem like a better option. If the catastrophic injuries occurred in the tent, and not later at the ravine where the bodies were found or even post mortem somehow, then I suspect the Karman vortex street more likely because the hikers had to leave until the winds died down or risk more internal injuries.
@richardknott4626 Жыл бұрын
According to other reports the footprints leaving the tent did not indicate running. They walked down the mountainside, which still seems strange given that if they had time to walk, wouldn't they also have had time to dress adequately?
@ivanvoropuyeff3572 жыл бұрын
check the photos of the tent. Tent remained in tact. It doesn't look like it was an avalanche. Also footsteps on a photo. After avalanche ? They were not idiots. They knew what they can except there.
@TanyaQueen1822 жыл бұрын
I've wondered about this for years. I always thought missing eyes/tongue means animals got to it after. But the radioactive clothing is still weird.
@QT56562 жыл бұрын
The most frustrating aspect of this mystery is how people obsess over the "missing tongue" as if it's unusual. 🤦♂️ Thanks Joe for not doing that. Good update.
@79Bobola2 жыл бұрын
Tongue being missing isn’t unusual, but finding a large quantity of blood in her stomach is. That means it happened while she was still alive, so yeah, very unusual.
@tomcat88492 жыл бұрын
@@79Bobola Sasquatch. She was I'm sure screaming in fear and it ripped her tongue out of her. They covered it all up, so people wouldn't be afraid to go in to the Forrest. Look into missing 411 case's.
@Thatonepersonyouheard2 жыл бұрын
No the radiation piss me so much more, literally one guy had radioactive clothes and he worked at a nuclear power plant. It's less mysterious than the video even suggests
@simon24932 жыл бұрын
This theory doesn't explain why would they escape without clothes, some might say "oh but they were afraid of another avalanche, but every experienced hiker will tell you that it's better to dig out your clothes despite risks, because it still gives you better chances of survival then going of without clothes.
@bobstamcmahon79482 жыл бұрын
How come no one mentions the photos they took and the worries they wrote in their journal?
@79Bobola2 жыл бұрын
Because they would mock you and say some overly cliche unoriginal comment like, “where’s your tinfoil hat?” But I agree, lot of things don’t add up to a mere avalanche.
@irishboer71242 жыл бұрын
And what about the body recovery team members who said they saw Bigfoot type prints in the area around the tent. And were told to say nothing about them.
@witchflowers69422 жыл бұрын
i definitely balk at “bigfoot, *shrug*” or “AYRLIENS!” theories, but i do feel that something more weird was going on. They could very well have been killed by an avalanche, but it seems that there was something more sinister, or just weird happening leading up to the final hours.
@ashokkumar-zw8vi2 жыл бұрын
The avalanche makes ton of sense and it seems very likely that is what actualy happened. I can get behind that. The main problem here is the avalanche theory doesnt explain why they evacuated their tent,which is their only shelter in that harsh environment,which is the first mystery here. They even cut their tent open from inside and that means they were in hurry. Opening the tent is a time waste for them. My thought is they heard the avalanche coming or something. Like grounds rumbling. But i dont think thats what happened. The avalanche theory is the best yet and i love it but it doesnt answer the main question. I would love to know others opinion about this. But i probably wont get any because this video came out long ago so less people are watching and commenting. But i will appreciate it if someone replied and let me know their thought of this. Thank you in advance if you replied. Love from Malaysia. Peace
@dude82232 жыл бұрын
Agreed, but only because bigfoot does not exist. If it is proved to be a real animal tommorrow, then you would be illogical to think it wasn't a yeti attack. They are attacked in front of the tent some in there underwear some fully dressed. Those in the rear cut there way out and run for it. Those stuck there are beat to death, so, car crash like injyries. Those that escape take shelter at the tree, try to build a fire for protection, then yeti shows up. Some try to climb the tree but are pulled down, leaving flesh in the bark. If yeti is an ape creature , well we know chimps and apes they rip out tounges, eyes and genitalia of their victims. Thus the tounges removed .A few more manage to get away and are freezing and attempt to dig out a shelter in the snow where there freeze to death. But.... yeti isn't real, so the avalanch theory is the best explanation. However.... if they find it is real.... then this was a yeti attack. And there are the photos and I think journal entries of a strange creature or native that was following them. I have heard it was a native wearing fur coats, that makes sense. That is why some ppl thought natives attacked them. But they where afraid of something or someone they had seen following them.
@ZombieRommel2 жыл бұрын
One of the biggest problems with the avalanche theory is that the tent wasn't crushed. In fact, several items were still set neatly in place. A stack of crackers and tinned food sat there undisturbed. After reading the book Death of Nine, I'm convinced this group was murdered, just not sure by who. One of the girls was keeping a diary and the very last entry in her diary was the name of the Mansi man the group met. Another theory is that the group member who worked in the nuclear lab set out on the expedition merely as a pretense to give nuclear information to a foreign power - basically he would have been a spy. The theory is that either the Soviets found out and killed him and the group (and then staged the whole thing to make it look like they died from nature) or the group member purposely provided disinformation to the foreign power (US likely) and this got discovered. The encampment in the woods below the hikers (in this theory) would have served as a staging area for whoever ended up killing the hikers. The tree with broken branches and twigs could have been used as an observation post by whoever was down there. The orderly footsteps in the snow and the way the items in the tent were undisturbed points to the idea that someone forced the hikers out the tent - as in they were told to stand up and start hiking downhill as they were. The tent getting cut open from the inside isn't verifiable fact - it was a passing comment from a seamstress who heard about the investigation. So it is possible the tent was cut open from the outside. Some of the men had bloody and bruised knuckles and contusions on their bodies in the shape of a horse shoe - the same shape as a rifle butt. The idea is that they fought back but got beat down. In addition to Luidmila, whose tongue and eyes were cut out, other hikers exhibited signs of torture, such as being burned and stood on (caving the ribs, chest cavity, etc). Idea being, whoever was in that lower forested area abducted the hikers from their tent at gunpoint, marched them down the hill, bound and tortured them, possibly to get information. Again, some of the men fought back but to no avail. Could have also been the Mansi guy though. But from everything I read in that book, abduction and murder appears to be the most likely theory.
@berretta9mm172 жыл бұрын
Sorry, but this just isn't "simple" enough...
@derdoc932 жыл бұрын
I don't know what happened there exactly, no one knows. But the guy in the video leaves so much information put that doesn't suit his theory, it's pathetic. It's a pure clickbait video, nothing is even new information in that video, and other information is wrong or missing. Your theory uses a lot more actual facts. Of course that doesn't mean that it's true, but at least it's based on more facts and doesn't leave out stuff that doesn't suit the theory, like the Avalanche theories. All those Avalanche theories are so easily debunked because they absolutely make no sense, you have to ignore so many facts to believe in the Avalanche theory. Bad video imo
@Frenchylikeshikes2 жыл бұрын
What is actually disappointing in a way is that most all "supernatural" or "unexplained" stories almost always end up being very natural and explainable lol. Kills the imagination.
@MedroffYT2 жыл бұрын
Keeps us grounded. We can't help but spruce every story up with a little bit of pizzazz. But when we're brought back down to reality with new revelations, it's a reassuring feeling.
@Zuignap2 жыл бұрын
This one can't be explained by saying avalanche though. There is so much proof not adding up to any theory you can think of, that's why it is such a weird case and is still unexplained
@witchflowers69422 жыл бұрын
there’s still lots of questions though, because it’s not just deaths that were strange.
@MicroClases_Ciencia2 жыл бұрын
I hate when avalanches cut tongues, pretty natural
@witchflowers69422 жыл бұрын
@@MicroClases_Ciencia you know it’s actually not that uncommon for people in accidents where they’re thrown around very suddenly and unexpectedly to bite their tongues partially or completely off. Not saying it’s definitely what happened, but it seems a likely explanation, for that aspect specifically
@sharonschmeederjohnson46482 жыл бұрын
If we go with the theory of that Avalanche, it doesn't explain the behavior of the others. They found the tent and they belonging inside which means they certainly could have gone back and retrieved their items. An avalanche isn't a long type of disaster, so when it was done they all could have gotten back together and reorganized. This is why I don't believe this theory is accurate. They would not have been exposed that long to the elements and the Avalanche would have been over with plenty of time to reorganize before the elements did affect them.
@thesteakout2 жыл бұрын
Joe, have you ever watched any of the documentaries made by Lemmino? If not it might be something you would like. He did an excellent video about the Dyatlav pass that I would say is top teir. Anyways great video as always!
@Kvadraten3762 жыл бұрын
So good! And if I remember correctly he has a completely different theory, concerning the portable heating stove, which may have given them monoxide poisoning.
@joescott2 жыл бұрын
That is a great channel!
@eliasholmes94672 жыл бұрын
Every time someone talks about Paradoxical Undressing with this case I roll my eyes. You really think that multiple members of an experienced mountain climbing group would get this condition all at once? There wouldn't be at least one member who would be able to talk some sense into them and let them know they had the condition at the time. And that they would get this condition while being inside their warm tent to begin with? Additionally, Lyudmilla Dubinina, the girl with her tongue cut off, was known to be a talker and would let you know when she felt like saying something and no one was going to stop her. Also, when her autopsy was performed she had a significant amount of blood in her stomach which means she swallowed it. Which means SHE WAS ALIVE when it happened completely doing away with the scavenger theory.
@79Bobola2 жыл бұрын
Agree 💯
@tomcat88492 жыл бұрын
It wasn't cut out it was ripped out of her. Again Sasquatch.... Probably from her screaming in Fear...
@tomcat88492 жыл бұрын
The Russian Military covered it all up...
@bellewether45342 жыл бұрын
I always thought the radioactive clothing was a bit of a red herring. I work in an archive and we literally have a Geiger counter and a lead safe for the odd item that shows up with a higher-than-average radition count. In more than half of these cases, there's no clear cause for it, probably a random environmental factor.
@mehGyver2 жыл бұрын
How does a avalanche that doesn’t tear down a tent cause massive internal skeletal damage 70 meters away?