Top 20 Historical Mysteries That Have Been Solved

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  • Опубликовано: 4 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 740

  • @WatchMojo
    @WatchMojo  Год назад +43

    What do you make of these answers? Let us know in the comments below!
    For more content like this, click here: ruclips.net/video/ZKbsj0br-vQ/видео.html
    Don't forget to play our Live Trivia (www.watchmojo.com/play) games at 3pm and 8pm EST for a chance to win cash! The faster you answer, the more points you get!

    • @blsbliss2900
      @blsbliss2900 Год назад +1

      Brian🎉

    • @mousemd
      @mousemd Год назад

      Well, we don't have to worry about whether Anastasia made it. Even if she did, she wouldn't be alive now

    • @ymeynot0405
      @ymeynot0405 11 месяцев назад +1

      Is southern Antartica a thing? It is at the south pole so anything other than the pole would be Northern Antartica.

    • @cadenceabbot9957
      @cadenceabbot9957 3 месяца назад

      Ah reefs in Bermuda. That explains the missing planes also I guess.

  • @Mustlovebooks15
    @Mustlovebooks15 Год назад +1050

    Now if only the royals would allow dna testing on the bones found in the tower to see if they are the lost princes. Try and get that mystery solved.

    • @Crow_Smith
      @Crow_Smith Год назад +136

      The fact that they won't feels mildly sus

    • @dsxa918
      @dsxa918 Год назад +30

      If you don't think their actually questionable you're at least mildly sus

    • @thomaswillard6267
      @thomaswillard6267 Год назад +117

      ​@@Crow_SmithWhich is worse;
      They come back positive and the modern Royal Line is descended from a man who has his kin murdered for his own ambition?
      They come back negative and that indicates someone at that time murdered two children and stuffed their bodies in the wall, unrelated to ambition?

    • @richardeberhart451
      @richardeberhart451 Год назад +15

      Who's DNA they gonna use?

    • @Mustlovebooks15
      @Mustlovebooks15 Год назад +52

      @@richardeberhart451 the same Canadian guy they found who is related to Richard 3rd. Or someone else. There are still family around.

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 Год назад +572

    I think the saddest one was the find of Anastasia. I think people just were hopeful
    that one of the children had survived.😥

    • @m4eou
      @m4eou Год назад +40

      Yes, such a sad story, i mean, even today African kids die every 3 seconds but first world cares more for a 17 year old spoiled brat who died a century ago in a starving country with some of the richest monarchs in the world.
      I'm born in a country with a royal family and even today seeing people with more empathy towards kids raised with more money per month than a worker will earn in their life discust me.

    • @karoneh
      @karoneh Год назад +21

      ​@@m4eou wow

    • @tazhienunurbusinezz1703
      @tazhienunurbusinezz1703 Год назад +116

      ​@@m4eouYou know people can care about more than one thing at once, right? African kids dying is bad. Murdering kids because you don't like how their father is doing things, also bad. You also should know that blaming children for the actions of their parents & the adults making the decisions isn't the moral gotcha you seem to think. Blaming a young girl who had zero choice in who she was born to & zero influence to effect any kind of change in circumstances for herself let alone anyone else around her is kind of unhinged ngl. Her entire short life was controlled in every single aspect, right up to who she'd have eventually been forced to marry had she lived & then her husband would have controlled what she did. While the cage may have been guilded & the food might have been good, a prison is still a prison.
      Nice whataboutism though. Have a great day.

    • @justianowski
      @justianowski Год назад +17

      Dude, I saw the animated movie when I was 11 and I fell into the rabbit hole! Those poor children didn't deserve to die because their dad was a poor ruler. One of the kids could have learned from his mistakes and made better choices

    • @m4eou
      @m4eou Год назад +10

      @@tazhienunurbusinezz1703 she was 17 at the moment of her death, she was having a better life than the 99,9% of her country and probably the full world, surrounded by the biggest luxury in a country where the system his father rule was causing hunger and death while they were having exotic orgies and parties than could make Elon Musk parties look like a hippy drinking in the mud. The deaths in his country were the result of him and since crowns are hereditary each son was a chance to go back to tsarist monarchy system, whitewashed by cinema like if it were ok to have a dictatorship as long as you give it back to you son when you die. Nobody is justifing the death of an inocent child, but it sounds to me like feeling pity for Eva Brown or Mussolini's wife during world war ii, showing more empathy towards a 1% of incredibly rich and fortunate parasites because they died with a famous name after ruining countries were millions died nameless in a ditch during famine and wars.
      Kind regards from a guy born in a country ruled by a monarchy.

  • @aalimackey9115
    @aalimackey9115 11 месяцев назад +265

    history is truly the greatest story of all time. i don’t get why people don’t want to understand or talk more about it.

    • @baronvonjo1929
      @baronvonjo1929 10 месяцев назад +6

      The more I learn about history the more it jist kinda puts into perspective on what being human can be. It really changes your mindset.
      Also it's just fascinating to learn how millions of people behaved and lived.
      I guess presentation makes it boring for folks.

    • @KyloRenRadio
      @KyloRenRadio 9 месяцев назад

      Thank you! I was a kid in the 70's; seeing the Tutankaum exhibit and watching "I, Claudius" with my mom inspired me to see history as amazing, interesting, and based in reality.

    • @benjidurst
      @benjidurst 8 месяцев назад

      I'll tell you why cuz it doesn't matter it's always changing... The past the future it's all uncertain and you can only speculate about it you're not there to now the facts so... Why bother with something that is lost and what matter the most is your conscience and how you perceive something. It depends on the point of view of everybody.

    • @SyracuseIsOranges
      @SyracuseIsOranges 4 месяца назад

      Bc it's history who gives af.

    • @Tipper16
      @Tipper16 2 месяца назад

      Cuz none of it is fully truthful

  • @PaperSeraglio
    @PaperSeraglio Год назад +313

    I paused the video at Troy because it didn't go into Heinrich Schliemann at all. He was a speculator, got rich from luck and war profiteering, and like nearly all early "archaeologists," was something of a grifter. Sure, as the video says, he discovered the nine levels of the city of Troy, after he profited off of another, poorer, actual amateur archaeologist's work -- I was amazed the video even mentioned the guy who actually deserved the credit -- but after Schliemann began excavating, he utterly destroyed the historical city of Troy by using dynamite. He wrongly believed, for no real reason, that the city of Hector and Priam would be the lowest layer, so he dynamite right down through all the layers to get to it, destroying the entire site in the process, including level six, which is believed to be the actual right time period for the Trojan war.
    He then found some gold and jewels on the bottom layer, smuggled them out of the country, called them Priam's treasure, and then had his wife wearing them as bling at parties all over England. And this guy has been touted as "the father of archaeology" for decades. Meanwhile, this is only the worst of his atrocities, as it's suspected that he purchased antiquities from elsewhere and then passed them off as artifacts of important figures in history, such as the mask of Agamemnon, and the bust of Cleopatra, solely to aggrandize himself.
    Anyway ... now you know how to make an archaeology grad angry. Bring up Schliemann...

    • @michellekennedy4426
      @michellekennedy4426 Год назад +27

      Wow,I didn't know any of that,very interesting,thanks for sharing.

    • @luvlols4462
      @luvlols4462 Год назад

      The early paleontologists were shady, too. They would steal, lie about their finds and even sabotage each other's dig sites.

    • @smorgasbroad1132
      @smorgasbroad1132 Год назад +9

      Yes, thanks for taking the time to share that info. I fully believe it, too.👍

    • @rickwrites2612
      @rickwrites2612 11 месяцев назад

      It wont make archeo/anth majors or grad students angry, theyre mostly post-colonial hippies in it for ethnobotany ime 🤤

    • @mccallosone4903
      @mccallosone4903 11 месяцев назад

      word. dude was trash

  • @1975MGB
    @1975MGB 6 месяцев назад +87

    I was stationed at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave desert. We actually saw "sailing rocks" sail. They didn't need ice. The dry lake bed (Rogers) would get wet at night from condensation and make the surface have a kind of slimy mud. Any kind of wind could make the rocks move. It was even hard to walk on when it got like that but you could run and then slide for a great distance. It cracked me up that this was considered a big mystery.

  • @navaks5335
    @navaks5335 Год назад +121

    0:41 20) King Tut’s Tomb
    1:50 19) The Connecticut Vampire
    2:51 18) Blood Falls
    3:55 17) Ancient Viking Code
    4:41 16) The Starchild Skull
    5:44 15) The Lost Army of Cambyses
    7:00 14) The Flying Dutchman
    8:04 13) The City of Troy
    9:31 12) The Easter Island Heads
    10:56 11) The Classic Maya Collapse
    12:04 10) The Fate of The Franklin Expedition
    13:13 9) Mysterious Notes in “The Odyssey”
    13:51 8) King Richard III’s Death
    15:00 7) The Sailing Stones
    15:54 6) The Face on Mars
    16:32 5) The Location of The USS Indianapolis
    17:45 4) How the Pyramids Were Built
    18:47 3) What Caused the Tunguska Event
    20:00 2) The Bermuda Triangle
    21:09 1) Anastasia’s Escape

    • @billblaski9523
      @billblaski9523 Год назад +5

      Nice

    • @mc-rn8ro
      @mc-rn8ro Год назад +1

      Because who would want to actually WATCH the video they clicked on, right?
      Lemme guess, you told all your friends how the sixth Harry Potter book ends when you were in school.

    • @billblaski9523
      @billblaski9523 Год назад +8

      @@mc-rn8ro huh?

    • @marisapaola9010
      @marisapaola9010 11 месяцев назад +2

      Jack the Ripper should also be on this list. DNA from a victims scarf had blood stains of that pycho polish barber, i've forgotten his name. He was sectioned after he tried to stab his sister.

    • @kelst75
      @kelst75 10 месяцев назад +5

      ​@mc-rn8ro
      What a weird thing to say. People might be interested in some of these things and not others. E.g. I don't care about the Franklin expedition so I could skip it.

  • @eunomiac
    @eunomiac Год назад +162

    You missed the most obvious explanation for the Bermuda Triangle that came out around the same time --- statistically, there simply _aren't_ more disasters in the Bermuda Triangle than anywhere else, once you take into account how heavily-trafficked the area is.

    • @bbsy1
      @bbsy1 Год назад +5

      Personally, I prefer the Percy Jackson explanation lol! Coral reef is close enough to one of the monsters lol

    • @eunomiac
      @eunomiac Год назад +6

      @@bbsy1 But that's the reason I find this omission to be so weird --- it doesn't _explain_ the Bermuda Triangle at all: It explains why there's nothing _to_ explain. Alternative "explanations" are like explaining why tables are flat or wheels are round: There's no explanation needed! :)

    • @jimroscovius
      @jimroscovius 10 месяцев назад +5

      Agreed, but yet people like to make up crap.

    • @dalehammers4425
      @dalehammers4425 7 месяцев назад

      The problem isnt that the disasters happen, its that planes and ships flat out vanish with no warning or anything. And there is still a very scientific reason being bandied about right now, hydrogen gas. There is a bunch of frozen gas at the bottom of the ocean in that are, sometimes it thaws and releases into the water, that would kill the buoyance of ships sinking em like rocks and would also take out the engines on any plane caught in the gas once it leaves the water and gets into the air. Hard for people to give out maydays when they are sank/crashed faster than they can respond.

    • @lisaanderson3549
      @lisaanderson3549 4 месяца назад +1

      I remember reading something about statistics regarding the bermuda triangle. If there was statistical evidence for an increased number of incidents, the insurance premiums would reflect that to cover increased liability.

  • @VTPPGLVR
    @VTPPGLVR Год назад +83

    03:15
    I expected “This was discovered by the glacier’s namesake” to be followed by something like “Jonathan M Bloodfalls”

  • @mimiix316
    @mimiix316 Год назад +171

    So, did we figure out how many licks does it take to get to the center of a tootsie pop? These are real questions 😂😂

    • @existinginparadox7510
      @existinginparadox7510 Год назад +11

      “One… two-hooo… CRUNCH.”

    • @quigonvin6532
      @quigonvin6532 Год назад +19

      It’s 42. It’s always 42. Don’t forget your towel

    • @C0LDMachine
      @C0LDMachine Год назад +9

      If you're looking for a serious answer, we actually did! It takes 364 licks

    • @lorifintel9784
      @lorifintel9784 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@quigonvin6532😂

    • @thomascarr3748
      @thomascarr3748 7 месяцев назад +1

      Cuz I got to know

  • @danielleeveritt9323
    @danielleeveritt9323 Год назад +94

    They have discovered how the Easter Island heads were moved. A number of people, working together, would rock them back and forth or "walk" them.

    • @iluvcamaros1912
      @iluvcamaros1912 Год назад +37

      Yeah it's what the natives had been saying for years to outsiders. They thought it was a silly local legend, but yeah, they "walked."

    • @mccallosone4903
      @mccallosone4903 11 месяцев назад +1

      was gonna type this myself, you beat me to it

    • @rebeuhsin6410
      @rebeuhsin6410 10 месяцев назад +3

      And they are much bigger than just heads. Many have bodies that are buried.

    • @danielleeveritt9323
      @danielleeveritt9323 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@rebeuhsin6410 oh yeah most of them have rather large bodies underground.

    • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
      @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking 7 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks a lot Mojo, for showing the "ancient aliens" show. Implying aliens built them. Nice continuation of racist ideas that the locals "couldn't possibly have done this feat."

  • @sweettooth1620
    @sweettooth1620 Год назад +86

    One thing this proves is what my history teacher told me… people tend to point the finger to aliens on things we don’t understand yet

    • @TheTwistedTreant
      @TheTwistedTreant Год назад +7

      or god

    • @Crow_Smith
      @Crow_Smith Год назад +8

      Aliens, Magic, God/s - When you can't explain it. That and the supernatural like the undead or ghosts. A lot of haunted buildings have been found to just be old and decaying [hence random movement and slight breezes] and weirdly a lot of them tend to be in areas of high or low magnetism or like that one place in I wanna say Canada where Gravity or the Magnetic Field [forget which] is just oddly weaker than anywhere else.

    • @nurlindafsihotang49
      @nurlindafsihotang49 Год назад

      Ey, much better from when if literate women like me being called a witch.

    • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
      @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking 7 месяцев назад +1

      No, it's just traditional "Master Race Theory" - the BS Hitler believed.
      (Yes, Ancient Aliens is racist.) Aryans, are that "Master Race" dropped off by Aliens, meant to rule over the world of Non-Aryan, bestial, savage, stupid, nose-picking idiots. _Aryans/Aliens, made everything monumental of the past. Not brown people!_
      If you don't believe, me, start reading. It's depressing many came to believe this. More depressing - many still do.

  • @civiccattle6730
    @civiccattle6730 Год назад +60

    Wow, this makes science seem that much more interesting!

    • @juniornisthal2216
      @juniornisthal2216 7 месяцев назад

      Eh not really. The fact that they are attributing the idea of number 19 being labeled as vampire because of tuberculosis is just flat out ignorant. Consumption was known for a very long time before the 19th century in fact. So science doesn’t really help here… at least in why they assume he was a vampire…

    • @AFGsultanZ
      @AFGsultanZ 7 месяцев назад

      History too

  • @ryanbell6627
    @ryanbell6627 Год назад +36

    Narrator: "Found in Southern Antarctica..."
    Me: Wait.... So in the middle???

  • @dlewdm
    @dlewdm Год назад +78

    They’ll never figure out who put the bop in the bopshibopshibop. Or for that matter, who put the ram in the ramalamadingdong

  • @twrampage
    @twrampage Год назад +64

    A lot of the incidents attributed to the Bermuda Triangle only actually had things go wrong after the ship or aircraft had left them.

    • @str.77
      @str.77 10 месяцев назад

      What's "them"?

    • @twrampage
      @twrampage 10 месяцев назад

      @@str.77 A typo, was meant to be there.

    • @str.77
      @str.77 10 месяцев назад

      @@twrampage Why not correct it?

  • @t2delan1
    @t2delan1 Год назад +17

    I LOVED this one WatchMojo!!! Well done!!!

  • @kleine.5438
    @kleine.5438 Год назад +27

    If you can find more solved historical mysteries, will DEFINITELY be hoping for an eventual part 2 please🤞

  • @kawh8719
    @kawh8719 11 месяцев назад +58

    I love that ancient myths and mysteries are now solved through scientific observation and the study of what's real. Totally amazing to me. I've felt insulted when people assume that 'complex' mysteries of the past have to be made by Aliens or some other garbage.

    • @FourteenWords-n4l
      @FourteenWords-n4l 10 месяцев назад

      Schwah.

    • @MikadoYuma
      @MikadoYuma 10 месяцев назад +2

      You sound incredibly fun to be around 🤨

    • @FourteenWords-n4l
      @FourteenWords-n4l 10 месяцев назад

      @@MikadoYuma
      I hear you.

    • @MyValentine91
      @MyValentine91 10 месяцев назад +2

      People never change, when they can't explain something they invent some supernatural powers responsible, like god.

    • @JLMac322
      @JLMac322 9 месяцев назад +4

      Not only insulting, but often fuelled by racism. The ancient alien theories often tend to center around nonWestern ancient cultures

  • @kubek
    @kubek Год назад +22

    I imagine aliens watching this and saying "Damm Earth scientists! They take away all the credit from us!"

    • @Meep55412
      @Meep55412 Год назад +1

      🤣

    • @wsclly
      @wsclly Год назад +3

      "We wrote our names in their crops and everything!"

    • @dukeon
      @dukeon 10 месяцев назад

      Hahahaha

  • @maybememory1
    @maybememory1 4 месяца назад +6

    There are still MANY Egyptian rulers whose tombs are still missing. Tutankhamun was not the last, by any means.

  • @MrWashed_
    @MrWashed_ Год назад +19

    Man I was hoping on seeing something about the people of roanoke

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Год назад +1

      Is that considered solved yet?

    • @MrWashed_
      @MrWashed_ Год назад +2

      @@glenchapman3899 i believe not, thats why i was hoping lol

    • @M00nageDaydream83
      @M00nageDaydream83 Год назад +14

      The settlers moved inland, left a note even in the tree stating such, then made a life coinciding with the natives in the area. It's actually not all that mysterious but historically the records were incredibly biased against the indigenous people, and portraying them as anything other than "savages" was not part of the narrative.
      If you're really interested please look into the History of the Lumbee tribe in North Carolina (Use caution with your sources though because their story is unfortunately diluted and corrupted bc of politics and systemic racism).

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Год назад +4

      @@M00nageDaydream83 Thank you for that summary and warning. And yes I see what you mean lol. Interesting the tribe is also notable for an incident in the 50s involving the KKK getting some lumps. I did see a very balanced article from the ASU regarding DNA and genetic studies

    • @M00nageDaydream83
      @M00nageDaydream83 Год назад +3

      @glenchapman3899 I'm glad u read up on it! My family on my mom's side is Lumbee, so if you have any questions lmk and I can help you find more resources:)

  • @monicawylie3985
    @monicawylie3985 Год назад +15

    The Flying Dutchman was also depicted on SpongeBob SquarePants

  • @CARL_093
    @CARL_093 Год назад +6

    Great video list👍

  • @captainsensiblejr.
    @captainsensiblejr. 11 месяцев назад +8

    The Egyptian farmers were unable to cultivate their farms during the annual flooding of the Nile. The Pharaohs hired them in their tens of thousands to work on constructing pyramids and temples..

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah it was an early form of workfare.

  • @KimsLantern
    @KimsLantern 11 месяцев назад +7

    This was a great list and video, Watch Mojo. Really enjoyed and learned a lot!!! Loved the myth bust of the Flying Dutchman!!!! That was SO cool to learn about!!!

  • @RareFactReveals
    @RareFactReveals 2 месяца назад

    Absolutely stunning! You’ve captured the essence perfectly 6:50

  • @thegunlikdude
    @thegunlikdude Год назад +10

    Jack the ripper mystery not found yet

  • @DreamBelief
    @DreamBelief 5 месяцев назад +7

    As a person with disabilities and deformities it is maddening that people to this day still quickly attribute things to aliens. Why are they quicker to assume an alien than a human being?

    • @Golshid-vx2cp
      @Golshid-vx2cp 5 месяцев назад

      You're very right. It's usually ignorance and lack of knowledge

    • @dil09ful
      @dil09ful 3 месяца назад

      Clout

    • @loduca16
      @loduca16 3 месяца назад

      Sounds like something an alien would say @dreambelief

  • @deadeyes4626
    @deadeyes4626 Год назад +31

    I legit said ‘’iron oxide’’ when looking at the picture..how did it take them soo longgg

    • @AngeliqueStP
      @AngeliqueStP Год назад +4

      Same, it's always screamed rust to me. The orange-ness of it...

    • @alexacarrillo4339
      @alexacarrillo4339 Год назад +1

      I grew up in a burnt out mining town and that was my first thought.

    • @Meep55412
      @Meep55412 Год назад +1

      Same, as soon as I saw that color I thought "rust". Rust was not a new concept at that time either.

    • @dissodatore
      @dissodatore Год назад

      the pic they showed for this vid, was orangy, but there are other pics that show it bright red.

    • @maevependragon
      @maevependragon Год назад

      Seriously. As someone who's had well-water for years, this was a gimme...

  • @jesusromanpadro3853
    @jesusromanpadro3853 Год назад +10

    I live in San Juan, Puerto Rico. I haven't hear anything about the Bermudas Triangle, probably since the 80s.

    • @owlcowl
      @owlcowl 10 месяцев назад +3

      There never was anything more mysterious about planes & ships disappearing in that area than anywhere else in the world. NOVA did an exceptional debunking job way back in the 1970s but the silliness persists to this day. As Isaac Asimov stated at the time, "If ever there was a non-subject, it's the Bermuda Triangle."

    • @jesusromanpadro3853
      @jesusromanpadro3853 10 месяцев назад

      @owlcowl yes. Is an area with heavy traffic.

  • @DiscGoStu
    @DiscGoStu 6 месяцев назад +3

    I saw a Fata Morgana with my own eyes and it was INSANE. Two full size cargo ships levitating like speeders from Star Wars

  • @ArtMysteries135
    @ArtMysteries135 6 месяцев назад

    Great video! Loved the content and style of your presentation. This video was really helpful, thanks for sharing.👍❤

  • @lancerudy9934
    @lancerudy9934 Год назад +5

    Great video thanks 😊

  • @TifSC
    @TifSC 11 месяцев назад +6

    It's nice to hear a non-Brit pronounce Leicester correctly.

  • @RiteTheWrongs
    @RiteTheWrongs Год назад +5

    Ah yes. The blood falls. Located in southern Antarctica… wait a minute…

  • @madliberal7710
    @madliberal7710 10 месяцев назад +6

    I still suspect Richard III of contracting the death of his nephews (Princes In the Tower") so he could have denial about what happened to them.

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel 7 месяцев назад

      The only way the boys deaths could have benefited Richard was if they had been made public.

    • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
      @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking 7 месяцев назад +1

      The Tudor dynasty - is the only dynasty that benefited from killing the princes. They knocked out their competition. Richard III hid them away, trying to save them. It makes sense that they were buried in the same Tower they were hiding in - because the Tudor soldiers were all over the property. Potential witnesses to seeing them alive.
      In order to blame Richard, they had to be killed in the same place they were found cowering. Their bodies couldn't leave the building or else people would know.
      The Tudor dynasty got to write history. But the people in the North of England never believed this crap.

  • @Cuckoorex
    @Cuckoorex Год назад +11

    "Infinitely older than 1000 years..."
    Uh, "infinitely older" means pre-existent to the universe itself. Scholars! LOL

    • @AngeliqueStP
      @AngeliqueStP Год назад +3

      It's a 'turn of a phrase' that's been around ...never was meant to be taken literally.

    • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
      @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking 7 месяцев назад +3

      It's a guy from ancient aliens saying that, did you notice? 🤣

    • @Tipper16
      @Tipper16 2 месяца назад

      Indefinite means unknown or unstated amount of time.

    • @Cuckoorex
      @Cuckoorex 2 месяца назад

      @@Tipper16 it does, but Easter Island guys says "infinitely" not "indefinitely".

    • @Cuckoorex
      @Cuckoorex 2 месяца назад

      @@AngeliqueStP Turns of phrase don't bolster my confidence in that guy's scientific acumen, though.

  • @sandraheinrich5949
    @sandraheinrich5949 10 месяцев назад +1

    Tut's Tomb.-- "Unlike any other in the VALLEY." --- Explains it right there.. Tut was a Valley Girl!

  • @Lukecash2
    @Lukecash2 10 месяцев назад +3

    I’ve heard that when the Rapa Nui were asked on how the Easter Island Heads got into position: they said “Walked”
    Now they believe the heads were actually “rocked” or twisted into position using ropes and sleds. The Rapa Nui had no word for rocking.

    • @Tipper16
      @Tipper16 2 месяца назад

      We've always rocked everything back-and-forth to move. We call that walking it.

  • @PixelPioneer176
    @PixelPioneer176 Год назад +3

    What a treat! If this draws you in, a book with similar texture is a surefire hit. "The Silent Bridge: Echoes of the Unspoken Past" by Emma Wick

  • @kurikong2379
    @kurikong2379 4 дня назад

    Richard going into the battle with a severe scoliosis is hella gangster tho

  • @dynamicvibe4248
    @dynamicvibe4248 Год назад +10

    Everytime I hear of the Easter Island. One emoji come in my head: 🗿🗿🗿🗿

  • @siiuuuuuu9222
    @siiuuuuuu9222 6 месяцев назад +3

    5:45 why are they throwing cats 😂

  • @1989Nihil
    @1989Nihil 10 месяцев назад +9

    Regarding #12: We do know (now) how the Moai were moved form the quaries to where they were errected: the Rapa Nui "walked" then to their place by wrapping a rope aorund the head, and then have a group of at least ten people on either side pull and release respectively, to wobble the carved monolith. They'd take side steps with each tilt of the monolith in their respective direction, to get it to move foreward. There's a few videos of researchers demonstrating this technique around youtube. But the frustrating part about it is, that all the first europeans who were wondering about how the monoliths got to their pedestals from the quary had to do, was actually _listen_ to the Rapa Nui when they told the europeans that they walked the statues to their place, and not dismiss that as superstious talk.

  • @kaelang12
    @kaelang12 7 месяцев назад +1

    Yall hear that screaming in the distance? That's Trey the Explainer exploding in rage at the mention of Schliemann 😂

  • @montewright111
    @montewright111 8 месяцев назад +10

    The pyramid “explanation” leaves out a LOT of crucial unanswered questions.

    • @dalehammers4425
      @dalehammers4425 7 месяцев назад +3

      Yup, how did they get the stones on the skiffs, how did they lift them into the area to place them, how did they cut them so precisely, how did they get enough water to move that much that far? Moving a 1 ton skiff isnt much, but when you put a 100 ton stone on it things change rapidly, and a bit of water wont be making much of a difference at that point.

    • @kosaba11
      @kosaba11 6 месяцев назад

      @@dalehammers4425 The answer to all your points can be answered when you remember the purpose of the pyramids - they're giant tombs for the pharaohs of Egypt. With that in mind, you should be able to imagine that it wouldn't be just 10 or so people moving stone, but hundreds.
      For your question of how they got the stones onto the skiffs, that's simple. While a theory, should be too hard to imagine a few hundred workers / slaves, along with their field animals, like their oxen, donkey's, etc., flipping the stones, after they've been cut, onto the skiffs. And there are various methods they could use - the workers / slaves on side, pushing it, while the oxen pull from the other side with ropes to flip it over, for example.
      As for the water problem - they really wouldn't need it. Ox can pull equal to, or greater to their weight. Your average ox can weight more than a tone. With the stone on a skiff, it would make it easy for the oxen, along with people, to pull the stones. Now, I'll grant you, the process would likely have slowed immensely as the pyramid got larger, but it would still be doable.
      As for the cutting of the stones - if you actually look at the stones of a pyramid, they're pretty rough. The answer to this is simple - craftsmen have been able to carve intricate designs with ease since before Ancient Egypt - you really think making a semi-perfect cube or rectangular prism would be difficult?

  • @bryanmatthews2370
    @bryanmatthews2370 Год назад +5

    Damn, i already knew all these. For some reason i was thinking it was mysteries solved recently, like within the kast year. Like the roman concrete

  • @peterpayne2219
    @peterpayne2219 10 месяцев назад +2

    I was dubious, but this was a really good list! Congrats, WhatMojo!

  • @nellidivina5280
    @nellidivina5280 Год назад +5

    8:31, was Troy a city or a region, i remembered a phrase from the Iliad, "since the greeks could not attack troy, they attacked and raided the nearby cities and villages"?

    • @tylertriezenberg1399
      @tylertriezenberg1399 6 месяцев назад +2

      It was the predominant city in that area of Anatolia, but there were other cities who would have allied with them. Unfortunately we'll probably never know all the details since basically all we know 3000 years on is there was a city there and there was a battle there. Unfortunately, the "archeologist" who discovered it actually got which layer was which wrong and so blew up with TNT much of the most probably layer for Troy

  • @wangson
    @wangson 11 месяцев назад +2

    Wow! Well done! This was an incredibly informative, mind-boggling and absolutely captivating piece! Really well done!

  • @mastrxl
    @mastrxl Год назад +17

    "Recent discoveries"; starts the list with a discovery from 1922

    • @candicehoneycutt4318
      @candicehoneycutt4318 Год назад +13

      Historically speaking, that's *very* recent

    • @missg.5940
      @missg.5940 5 месяцев назад

      For some that is more recent than for there’s.😉

  • @Vuitton_The_Ruler_
    @Vuitton_The_Ruler_ Год назад +4

    At 2am going down rabbit holes 😂

  • @zenfriend3260
    @zenfriend3260 8 месяцев назад +1

    Fun fact, it wasn’t even Anastasia who was missing in the first place. The two missing bodies were one of her brother and one of her sister, Maria. Anastasia died with the rest of her family in the basement. The two bodies were found burned not far from the rest of the family’s gravesite in an attempt to throw off people from finding all the royals back when they were executed.

  • @garbagedaycleveland
    @garbagedaycleveland 10 месяцев назад

    More please THANK YOU!❤

  • @Jeremy-ql1or
    @Jeremy-ql1or 11 месяцев назад +4

    They knew about the soil erosion leading to the end of the Mayan Empire before 2012. The movie Apolcalypto created interest in the Mayans when it came out in 2006. I saw a thing about the Mayan Empire when that movie was out that talked about the overfarming and deforestation causing the erosion.

  • @katc7669
    @katc7669 7 месяцев назад

    Gratz on level 80! Now the game really begins. 😉Fun adventures as usual! I didn't see anyone mention in a quick glance of the comments below, but you can definitely unlock all the specializations if you have the expansions. Hero points in the expansions are worth 10 points each, so you should be able to unlock all three specializations with points to spare. Looking forward to your future exploration and can't wait for your impressions outside the original maps!

    • @michaeldebidart
      @michaeldebidart 5 месяцев назад

      Bro can I have some of whatever you’re on

  • @Lexington101
    @Lexington101 8 месяцев назад +2

    You forgot number 21, Finding the Good scissors in the upstairs drawer. Mystery solved!

  • @childress2931
    @childress2931 20 дней назад

    All I have to say is, Rebecca is my favourite of all the narrators.

  • @thegoldencrystal9677
    @thegoldencrystal9677 5 месяцев назад

    I recently saw something that mentioned that there was an underground section of the Nile running along the pyramids at Giza that would have been above ground during their construction, and it's speculated that it was used to transport the stones from the quarry.

  • @carmelmhennessy9738
    @carmelmhennessy9738 Год назад +9

    Some of these are very interesting. Thanks for sharing them

  • @Woogsie
    @Woogsie Год назад +12

    Did they ever find out if he who smelt it had indeed dealt it?

    • @dukeon
      @dukeon 10 месяцев назад

      Yes. It’s true.

    • @1975MGB
      @1975MGB 6 месяцев назад

      Not me!

    • @Blueberryyymuffin
      @Blueberryyymuffin 5 месяцев назад

      Whoever denied it, implied it.

  • @LucienSabre
    @LucienSabre Год назад +9

    12) That’s just one theory among dozens of others (with no more proof backing it up than the others). None of the mysteries surrounding the Mohai has actually being solved.
    11) Same goes for the Mayan pre-spanish collapse: that’s just the umpteenth theory for it, which does not have any bulletproof evidence more than the others have.
    10) That is not the whole mystery of what happened to the Franklin expedition: what has been found only shows the fate of the members who were left behind because sick or injured; nobody knows what really happened to the majority of the two ships’ crew (the two ships themselves have never been found either if I recall correctly), that’s still a complete mystery.
    4) As for the Mohai and the Mayan pre-spanish collpase, that’s just the latest theory (which its inventor/discoverer boasted is the final solution) in the string. We do *not* yet know *for sure* how the pyramids were built.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 10 месяцев назад

      The Mayans were victims of climate change and that's why we have to take your gas range away from you today.

  • @King_of_Apathy
    @King_of_Apathy 2 месяца назад

    My all time favorite is “I don’t know: therefore aliens”

  • @pboytrif1
    @pboytrif1 9 месяцев назад +1

    The egyptian pyramids "wet sand" theory makes zero sense when you look at the actual pyramids, the position of the stone structures and especially the weight of the blocks. We simply have no idea how the 70 ton (not 1 or 2 ton) blocks above the king chamber were placed there, not to mention 1000 other things. Also, with regards to their purpose... a new theory that has been developed in the last few years suggests they were chemical plants used to create fertilizer and other commonly used chemicals. There is a massive amount of evidence and logic to those theories, elaborated on the youtube channel "land of chem"

  • @JAF30
    @JAF30 4 месяца назад

    As far as the pyramids go, throw in the recent findings that parts of the Nile river used to actually flow right up to the pyramids themselves, so they had even shorter distances to pull the stones over land.

  • @gabbymarti6948
    @gabbymarti6948 5 месяцев назад +1

    10:19 it's actually really simple, how they moved the moai. they walked

  • @carmenyeatts7601
    @carmenyeatts7601 4 месяца назад

    As someone who was obsessed with the Bermuda Triangle mystery in high school, to the point of using that topic for an English assignment, I simply cannot accept the simple explanation of just boats disappearing because of them being wooden or not made to withstand the conditions. Still leaves other disappearances unsolved, like air planes disappearing.

  • @jaredquinney204
    @jaredquinney204 Год назад +8

    I really love history

  • @harrymothowl8923
    @harrymothowl8923 Год назад +3

    I still think of the Tom Holland and Jacob Batalon clip when I here her intro haha

  • @mistir
    @mistir Год назад +13

    Forgive me my nitpicking, but about Bermuda: the shallow reefs do explain the ships, yet not so much the planes. I did catch the implication that the area is large enough that the percentage of planes affected is a reasonable amount compared to the overall plane traffic. I'm not quite convinced yet. 😎🔼💗

    • @maevependragon
      @maevependragon Год назад +1

      Came here for this comment. A coral reef doesn't explain away plane accidents.

    • @kenkahre9262
      @kenkahre9262 11 месяцев назад +13

      The explanation for the so-called "Bermuda Triangle is two-fold: shallow seas and heavy traffic of both sea and air. And always has been. The whole thing about the Bermuda triangle was concocted by a pulp fiction writer back in the early Fifties who needed a quick buck. The ratio of lost ships and aircraft is no worse there than any other comparable heavily trafficked area in the world.

    • @m3psy
      @m3psy 7 месяцев назад +5

      So this may not please you, but the Bermuda Triangle was busted, they just don’t cover everything here.
      It’s on of the most highly trafficked areas in the world, boats and planes. It’s also notorious for terrible weather. If you’re from the states you know it’s where all our hurricanes and tropical storms form. With high traffic and constant terrible weather the likeliness for incidents rises. Almost any case of someone dying or missing can be attributed to terrible weather. The ocean is extremely unforgiving

    • @gerryboudreaultboudreault2608
      @gerryboudreaultboudreault2608 6 месяцев назад +1

      A theory had it that sudden gas bubbles surfaced, lowering the the local atmospheric pressure... go figure. But the Triangle is not a unique spot at all.

  • @MoonBeam-w8b
    @MoonBeam-w8b Год назад

    This is the cutest & most special video! Thank you so much for sharing it & for looking after your animals so well. Animals rock! Keep up your amazing work! Keep doing & sharing the love & care.

  • @kaithartman
    @kaithartman 20 дней назад

    My favorite movie as a kid was that Anastasia movie, so I'm very sad to hear that she actually did pass away with her family.

  • @heru-deshet359
    @heru-deshet359 7 месяцев назад +2

    And yet, Jimmy Hoffa hasn't been found.

  • @RiseoftheLibertarian
    @RiseoftheLibertarian 4 месяца назад +2

    I just love how debunking stuff works. Twenty people make this claim, while one person makes another claim. Instead of listening to the twenty people we're going to listen to the one. And, claim this one person knows better than the twenty. Amazing.

  • @werewolf74
    @werewolf74 10 месяцев назад +3

    Ok, I understand they cant go into detail on everything here but 'Yes the French shorthand was deciphered' ok great can you give us an IDEA of what it said? or 'The coral reef is why people go lost in the Bermuda Triangle' how the hell does the coral crash planes?

  • @forrestgumball
    @forrestgumball 7 месяцев назад +1

    17:23 Impressive, very nice, let's see Paul Allen's lost ship

  • @Youcantseeme-c5f
    @Youcantseeme-c5f 5 месяцев назад +1

    You want me to believe we only found King Tut’s tomb in 2022??

  • @everythingisnand
    @everythingisnand 9 месяцев назад +1

    The moai walked into position. There were old myths about how they "walked" and it turned out that it was real. Rocking the statues makes it look like they are walking AND it allows to move them using the leverage of its own weight.

  • @bennifrijolitos1769
    @bennifrijolitos1769 Год назад +10

    I would rank the moai statues, the city of troy, viking code and the tomb of freakin tutankhamun as more important historical mysteries than some dead kid someone misplaced. But maybe I'm the wierdo.

  • @FreddyBadASS
    @FreddyBadASS 7 месяцев назад +1

    "Let's see Paul Allen's card"

  • @OutsideGamerGirl
    @OutsideGamerGirl 3 месяца назад

    The "tragedy" of the USS Indianapolis falls directly onto the Navy during that time. When the submarine was hit, there were three separate distress calls received by the Navy. Yet, the people in charge told the transmitters to ignore the SOS. Most of those sailors met their fate by being eaten alive by sharks. That is more than a tragedy; that is plain cruelty and gross negligence. The Navy let those men die.

  • @jameselden
    @jameselden Год назад +8

    This didn’t explain the building of the pyramids. It only stated how heavy objects could be moved - most likely horizontally, never mentioning the vertical feat.

    • @dissodatore
      @dissodatore Год назад +1

      there are other videos on YT that offer explanations to how stones were moved to the upper areas.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 10 месяцев назад +1

      They built ramps. Back then folks didn't have a lot to do to pass the time so they stacked rocks up. It wasn't like they could watch Netflix.

    • @jameselden
      @jameselden 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@1pcfredtake a look at the height of the pyramids and the grade required for said ramp, then look at the distance from the pyramid for said ramp. You’re talking about miles much less grade for a ramp to reach that height.

  • @retsofsivartnetloc9012
    @retsofsivartnetloc9012 11 месяцев назад +2

    I knew an old woman in the early OO s who absolutely believed the Bermuda triangle was caused by pyramids at the bottom the ocean

  • @MaddysinLeigh
    @MaddysinLeigh 6 месяцев назад

    Another mystery about Anastasia: which body is her’s. The two oldest Romanov daughters were positively identified but the two youngest daughters can only be identified as Nicholas and Alexandra’s daughters. We don’t know which is which.

  • @LordRain1031
    @LordRain1031 6 месяцев назад

    The problem with the "Bermuda Triangle" is...
    1) What's the excuse for planes going down AND losing all radio contact??
    2) What's the reason that ALL compasses go absolutely haywire??
    3) Have they found ANY "plane wreckages" in the Triangle?? If the plane went down, with modern technology, have we found ANY remains of aircrafts?
    I don't think they figured out the Bermuda Triangle. I think they "may have" figured out a possibility for ships. 🤷‍♂️

  • @Animeguy300
    @Animeguy300 Год назад +5

    Now that's history

  • @sophroniel
    @sophroniel 10 месяцев назад +1

    "Southern Antarctica"
    Babes, EVERYWHERE is South, because it's ANTARCTICA!!

  • @maevependragon
    @maevependragon Год назад +1

    Howard Carter was hired on by George Herbert, 5th Earl of Carnavon, Lord Porchester. The "Abbey" home for the series, "Downton Abbey" is the home of the Carnavons.

    • @dukeon
      @dukeon 10 месяцев назад

      Carnarvon*

  • @danielvelasco2948
    @danielvelasco2948 6 месяцев назад +1

    Not so fun fact: My Great Grandfather was a survivor of USS Indianapolis sinking, never got the chance to meet the man unfortunately “Walter J. Kazmierski”

  • @captainsensiblejr.
    @captainsensiblejr. 5 месяцев назад

    Flying Dutchman - "Cursed and undead sailors" - probably registered in Liberia.

  • @jeffbrehove2614
    @jeffbrehove2614 9 месяцев назад +2

    What is that thumbnail of, by the way?

  • @emanuelosorio9610
    @emanuelosorio9610 10 месяцев назад +5

    Ok but what are those masks in the thumbnail?

  • @mcgreeniepants
    @mcgreeniepants 10 месяцев назад +10

    I'm still thinking about how the existence of "southern Antarctica" (3:07) means "northern Antarctica" is also a thing

    • @dukeon
      @dukeon 10 месяцев назад +1

      Right? I did a double take when I heard that one.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 10 месяцев назад +2

      I'd think southern Antarctica would be the pole, wouldn't it? It's the only continent where the southernmost point would be in the middle of it. Anything along the edge would be the north.

    • @TDrake-iq6cp
      @TDrake-iq6cp 5 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe this is magnetic south? But idk how careful mojo really is.

  • @anonygrazer3234
    @anonygrazer3234 8 месяцев назад +1

    At 10:44, the guy walking on the other side of the Easter Island statues literally looks like he has no head because beige skins & hair and yellowed grass behind him!

  • @rincandrepeat.999
    @rincandrepeat.999 Год назад +2

    My childhood...😢

  • @ChristelVinot
    @ChristelVinot 3 месяца назад

    the bermuda triangle explanation didn't explain the bizarre experiences had by airplanes. seemingly warping through time and space and what not, and the instrument malfunctions. what explains that?

  • @MorsecodeZ
    @MorsecodeZ 6 месяцев назад +1

    How did someone decide what part (other than the middle) of Antarctica is "southern"?

  • @TwhyLERofficial
    @TwhyLERofficial Год назад +1

    7:44 the forgotten South Park writer

    • @dsxa918
      @dsxa918 Год назад

      I made the same correlation

  • @krisnayres
    @krisnayres Год назад +2

    What was the thumbnail supposed to illustrate?