Unexplained disappearances
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Lilith — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 02:05 AM)
First of all, there's no damn way a "compelling natural force" caused those bizarre circumstances. Whenever I read about seasoned hikers/trekkers getting involved in such wild and inexplicable circumstances, it raises questions to me. Especially when there's only an internal investigation. Always suspicious.
How do you explain them getting the sudden desire to leave ill-attired? How do you explain them getting separated if they're seasoned? How do you explain those extremely bizarre traumatic wounds? Eyes? Tongue? Chest?
It's ****ed up, straight away.
There are multiple such stories where things like this have happened, and I suppose some might contend that the cold caused confusion BUT,…BUT,…it does NOT explain in any way whatsoever those traumatic injuries.
Again, not really being investigated to satisfaction by multiple outside sources leaves me feeling queasy and uneasy and with more questions.
"Your emotional state is not my responsibility." – Warren Smith -
Giovanni Van Bronckhorst — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 02:13 AM)
I’ll read this tomorrow - crashing.
Have you looked into any other disappearances of a similar ilk?
I love scary stories!
Azn: “He (Orsen) now pretends to be in his 50s, but is in his 70s or close to 80 yo.” -
Giovanni Van Bronckhorst — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 04:48 PM)
I just read this. What do you think the explanation is? One theory I read is a particular frequency of sound that can cause hysteria
.
Also, I read a good one today about a guy who ran out of petrol whilst driving and phoned his brother for help. He then phoned 911 saying he was being chased by someone and was never seen again.
I’ll try and find it.
Azn: “He (Orsen) now pretends to be in his 50s, but is in his 70s or close to 80 yo.” -
Lilith — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 04:55 PM)
There's a town in America where there's a frequency that's emitted that can be heard by only certain people, and it's much like dogs, but it's giving people headaches, earaches. Let me see if I can find it:
The town of Taos, in north-central New Mexico, has been home to many famous residents including Julia Roberts, Dennis Hopper, D.H. Lawrence, Aldous Huxley and Donald Rumsfeld. It's a small, laid-back artsy community that is also home to an unusual mystery: a resident hum of unknown origin, the so-called "Taos Hum."
A variety of theories have been offered as an explanation, ranging from the mundane to the fantastic, the psychological to the paranormal. Stoned hippies, secret government mind control experiments, underground UFO bases and everything in between have been blamed.
The hum seems to have first been reported in the early 1990s. Joe Mullins, a professor emeritus of engineering at the University of New Mexico, conducted research into the Taos Hum. Based on a survey of residents, about 2 percent of the general population was believed to be "hearers," those who claimed to detect the hum. Sensitive equipment was set up in the homes of several of the "hearers," measuring sounds and vibrations but after extensive testing nothing unusual was detected.
The research revealed, however, that there was not a single identifiable Taos Hum but instead several different ones that people reported; some describe it as whir, hum or buzz. The fact that not everyone heard the same thing was puzzling, and suggests that they may have been reporting subjective experiences instead of objective sounds.
"Your emotional state is not my responsibility." – Warren Smith -
Lilith — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 05:09 PM)
Yeah, I totally agree with you on that. I'm just thinking, look at all this science re: the effect of sound on the body. Imagine these bizarre feelings happening in your body and you don't know why they're happening, or how, and you just know that suddenly your body doesn't feel right. Combine that with being isolated at high altitudes in freezing weather and low oxygen.
One guess (and I'm not buying it, just saying) is that people are freaking out and out of desperation and lack of thinking clearly, they're trying to escape.
Even with that being said, you're absolutely right. NOTHING in science can explain those traumatic injuries at all. How can you explain missing a tongue, missing eyeballs, and crushed skull and thorax? You just can't. There's possibilities of falling.
But I posted the other one re: the eyes being viscous (perhaps they were "missing" due to temperature?). Still doesn't explain one single aspect of ANY of those other bizarre and macabre incidents. Fucked up, that's what that is.
AND….again, no independent investigation is fishy AF.
"Your emotional state is not my responsibility." – Warren Smith -
Lilith — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 05:03 PM)
Why Do Some Sounds Make People Sick?
BY ANDREW LASANE NOVEMBER 2, 2015
While playing music too loudly can damage hearing, there are other things you should know about the effects of some sounds on the human body.
Decibels are used to measure the intensity of sounds (prolonged exposure to sounds above 85 dB can cause hearing loss), and frequency, which is measured in Hertz (Hz), refers to the amount of times a sound wave occurs each second. Human ears can generally pick up on sounds that fall in the 20Hz to 20KHz range. Frequencies above that are called ultrasonic, and frequencies below 20Hz are sometimes referred to as infrasonic. Infrasonic sound is both naturally occurring (earthquakes, ocean waves, upper-atmospheric lightning, etc.) and man-made. Some studies have shown that at high intensities, infrasonic sounds can have extra-aural bioeffects, including nausea, headaches, and dizziness, but why? The short answer: bad vibrations.
Sound is a wave of pressure traveling through a medium. Infrasonic sound, for example, has a long wavelength that, according to Popular Science, “makes it much more capable of bending around or penetrating your body, creating an oscillating pressure system.” Every object, including parts of the body, has a natural frequency at which it vibrates, a phenomenon known as resonance. Popular Science has more to say about how low-frequency resonance affects the body:
“Human eyeballs are fluid-filled ovoids, lungs are gas-filled membranes, and the human abdomen contains a variety of liquid-, solid-, and gas-filled pockets. All of these structures have limits to how much they can stretch when subjected to force, so if you provide enough power behind a vibration, they will stretch and shrink in time with the low-frequency vibrations of the air molecules around them.”
A 1983 study on human body vibration exposure published in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America found that
“exposure to vertical vibrations in the 5-10 Hz range generally causes resonance in the thoracic-abdominal system, at 20-30 Hz in the head-neck-shoulder system, and at 60-90 Hz in the eyeball. When vibrations are attenuated in the body, its energy is absorbed by the tissue and organs…Vibration leads to both voluntary and involuntary contractions of muscles, and can cause local muscle fatigue, particularly when the vibration is at the resonant-frequency level. Furthermore, it may cause reflex contractions, which will reduce motor performance capabilities.”
Other studies suggest that low-frequency noises, like those produced by wind turbines, trigger a reaction in the brain that could lead to adverse health effects. The frequencies have also been linked to changes in respiratory rhythms due to chest-wall vibration, with varying results depending on whether the subject is standing or sitting (resonance occurs at different levels depending on body position). Infrasound has been used at haunted houses to make visitors feel uneasy
"Your emotional state is not my responsibility." – Warren Smith -
Giovanni Van Bronckhorst — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 05:11 PM)
There was this awesome Brit show called Strange but True back in the day that looked into things like this. I was super young when it was on and it scared the bajesus out of me.
Look for it if it’s available. Probably horrendously dated now.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strange_but_True%3F
Azn: “He (Orsen) now pretends to be in his 50s, but is in his 70s or close to 80 yo.” -
PAGG'sBodyGuard — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 01:58 AM)
https://storiesoftheunsolved.com/2020/08/05/the-disappearance-of-karlie-guse/
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Friendo — 5 years ago(October 24, 2020 08:46 AM)
https://www.youtube.com/user/canammissingproject/videos
Flip the coin.