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Great Disappearances
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There was an episode regarding Stardust about 15 years ago on NOVA, I think. It's also known as the "STENDEC" incident because that was the ship's mysterious last message in Morse code; actually sent three times. A popular theory is that the plane crashed while being menaced by a UFO and that the message was somehow related to that. That's the most fun explanation.Last edited by sdreid; 10-28-2014, 05:19 PM.This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.
Stan Reid
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Originally posted by Mayerling View PostI feel Lang did not exist either. I first came across his fate in a book by Frank Edwards, who many students of mysteries feel liked to tell a good sounding story whether it was true or not.- Ginger
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Originally posted by Ginger View PostI grew up reading Frank Edwards! I don't think it was so much a disregard for the truth, as that he normally worked from memory, without going back to check sources. Still, the man knew how to tell a tale!
Edwards' book "Stranger Than Fiction" was (with Ripley's "Believe It Or Not!" series) the first odd story books that crossed my attention. But I've seen so many of these stories debunked over the years that I realize they should be classified under fiction more than fact. Edwards was a newspaper man, so he certainly knew a story that would catch attention.
Jeff
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Originally posted by sdreid View PostThere was an episode regarding Stardust about 15 years ago on NOVA, I think. It's also known as the "STENDEC" incident because that was the ship's mysterious last message in Morse code; actually sent three times. A popular theory is that the plane crashed while being menaced by a UFO and that the message was somehow related to that. That's the most fun explanation.
I recall a similar story on NOVA a year or two back about the discovery in recent years of a missing airliner's wreckage from the Andes - the plane had vanished in the late 1940s. It seemed to have a similar problem about the final message sent.
Jeff
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Originally posted by GUT View PostG'day Jeff
The story goes that in 1915 in Turkey during the Gallipoli Campaign some NZ soldiers on scout duty saw a company from the Norfolk Regiment march up a Hill shrouded in mist and cloud.
As they marched into the cloud they disappeared from view.
As the last of the company entered the mist it rose, leaving nothing to be seen they had simply, if you accept the account of the Kiwi's, vanished.
After the war the British asked the Turks if they were prisoners or had been taken in battle, the answer was no.
It has been claimed that they were taken in battle, one account claims by the Germans another by the Turks, however if the NZ soldiers are to be believed this seems impossible the lifting cloud would have had to reveal something.
There are a number of vanishing incidents in both World Wars that are settled with weakness. In 1918 the USS Cyclops vanished supposedly in the Bermuda Triangle with the loss of over 300 men. It was possibly badly stored with ballast and materiel, or top heavy (it had a curious structure), or hit by a rogue wave, or manganese in it's cargo may have eaten through the hull, or it was turned over by it's skipper to the Germans (the skipper was a German-American), or it hit a mine or was torpedoed. But there was supposedly no record in Germany of the sinking of the Cyclops by German sub or mine. I find this hard to believe. There seems to have been a state of desperate hate in some German U-Boat commanders towards allied ships. Only a month or so before the Cyclops was lost a U-boat literally murdered lifeboats full of doctors and nurses in the sinking of the Llandovery Castle in the Irish Sea by ramming the lifeboats. If that was possible, the sinking of the Cyclops could have been covered up too.
Jeff
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The 'mystery' of the Mary Celeste is kind of lost on me. The classic ghost ship story was the result of an alcohol leak which caused the crew to abandon ship, whereupon they were cut adrift. A few months later two rafts were found off the coast of Spain containing five decomposed bodies, one wrapped in an American flag, most likely part of the missing crew.
Now, the vanishing Lighthouse Keepers, on the other hand...
Last edited by Harry D; 10-29-2014, 11:58 AM.
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G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by GUT View Post
You can Google TIGHAR.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostThe 'mystery' of the Mary Celeste is kind of lost on me. The classic ghost ship story was the result of an alcohol leak which caused the crew to abandon ship, whereupon they were cut adrift. A few months later two rafts were found off the coast of Spain containing five decomposed bodies, one wrapped in an American flag, most likely part of the missing crew.
Now, the vanishing Lighthouse Keepers, on the other hand...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flannan_Isles
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostNow, the vanishing Lighthouse Keepers, on the other hand...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flannan_Isles
Actually I thought Dr. Who solved that as an alien invasion which he defeated. Only the island's name was changed to "Fang Island".
Jeff
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They were swept away by an exceptionally large wave or waves.
As with Mary Celeste, where the mystery is not so much what happened to those on board as why they left a seaworthy ship, the mystery of the lighthouse keepers is not what happened to them, but why they were out in a storm (and why one was in his shirt sleeves and left his post in contravention of the rules).
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Originally posted by PaulB View PostI dont think so, Harry.
I will admit, I have a morbid fascination with missing people cases. One recent case I read was Jared Michael Negrete, a 12 year-old Boy Scout who went missing in California in 1991. Him and the rest of his troop were hiking up Mt. San Gorgoni, when Jared became tired and was told to stay behind while the rest of the troop continued the hike. When they returned, Jared had disappeared. A search of the area managed to recover his camera, which contained snaps of the landscape and a self-portrait of his eyes and nose but Jared himself was never found.
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostYou don't think WHAT, PaulB?
I will admit, I have a morbid fascination with missing people cases. One recent case I read was Jared Michael Negrete, a 12 year-old Boy Scout who went missing in California in 1991. Him and the rest of his troop were hiking up Mt. San Gorgoni, when Jared became tired and was told to stay behind while the rest of the troop continued the hike. When they returned, Jared had disappeared. A search of the area managed to recover his camera, which contained snaps of the landscape and a self-portrait of his eyes and nose but Jared himself was never found.
The story of five decomposed bodies turning up off the coast of Spain appears to be a myth. I know of nothing that corroborates the story.
The case of Jared Negrete sounds like a tragic accident. My guess would be that he got bored waiting and tried to join the rest of the troop. Where he was is a dangerous place. On the other hand, he's been missing for more than two decades. You have thought his remains would have been found by now, but rock crevices can hide a lot.
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