I once found a rainbow in summer, in Vijaypur, in Karnataka, India. It dissapered after I saw it and appeared again later. Wasn't a hallucination, my brother saw it with me later too.
Rebecca that the name of S.T.A.R special forces unit member from resident evil video game and the game about mysteries and zombies in the outskirts of Raccoon City
yeah early humans were smarter, and healthier than us, not medieval humans, i mean like pre-historic. they were in tune with nature, real food from nature, and exercised regularly every day.
@@ericpabon2458 yeah, like they dont have anything to do if they are bored, they prob dont even know that feeling is called bored, so they do some weird shits
There is an odd connection between two of these stories. The lighthouse with the missing men inspired the 1977 Doctor Who story, "Horror of Fang Rock," in which the Fourth Doctor and his Companion Leela are the only survivors of an event at a lighthouse. That story was playing on a PBS station which was the second station interrupted by the Max Headroom event, and in fact, a couple of seconds of it can be seen in this video before Max pops in.
Was going to post the same thing. it's not resurrection (which is bringing the dead back to life), but reincarnation (being born again into a different body).
I read it in "The Book of Lists." Their blurb said the cave was in Spain. It's still intriguing either way. Of course, it's a legend going back nearly a thousand years. So, who knows? "The Book of Lists" contained lots of apocrypha.
The Children of Woolpit were Belgians orphans that had lost their parents and lived in the woods. The only food they had to eat were the wild plants in the forest and this turned their skin green. The boy died of malnutrition, and the girl lived to be a domestic servant of the local knight, and died of old age. In English history they taught that the villagers eventually found someone who spoke Flemish, and also found the bodies of their parents. The parents were also human. This story is referred in "Essential British History" and "Horrible Histories". The Horrible histories version is more fun.
Sleeping sickness - this happened to my great uncle when he was 4. When he came out of it, he was permanently 4/5 years old developmentally. He outlived his siblings, and was very much loved & spoiled by all of us until he passed away. Even though he was 89yo, it was like losing a child in our extended family. He was a sweet soul who radiated with kindness.
anyone who's seen horrible histories knows about the Children of Woolpit. They were immigrants from another country who's parents supposedly died on the journey. The kids then lived off of whatever they found in the forest for god knows how long and it likely pigmented their skin a greenish colour. The boy died of an illness which was unknown to the people of Woolpit and the girl went on to be a maid.
Yes! The "Scary Stories" sketch on them (Season 2 Episode 3) explains it just as you said. For those who aren't familiar with Horrible Histories, it's streaming on Hulu. As a history teacher, I obviously highly recommend it!
I live in Woolpit and it's quite a strange thing to happen but apparently they were from a Belgium cloth mill and the dyes they used ended up dying their skin but at least that's what everyone says round here
@@WatchMojo seasonal content sounds like a good way to end this year. Though i wouldn't put it past you guys if you legit did a _creepiest elves_ video
Have you ever heard of the mystery of random self combustion, there’s a number of people who just random lit on fire inside their torso and burned to death. It’s really crazy
@Jarrod Fuchs, et al, I think that spontaneous human combustion happens when a chemical reaction happens that makes humans go kaboom, just like the chemical reactions in bombs. Also, if you want proof of that being real, just look at giant whale carcasses that explode as they compose, and/or are helped to be forced to explode by human means. I also would not doubt that a natural variant of something that is chemically related to nitroglycerin, and/or methamphetamine, and/or some other type of explosive material, somehow forms in the body. However, I am neither a scientist, nor am I a doctor, but, if I were one of those things, then I definitely would not rule them out, though.
Unsolved mysteries did an episode on this!Ever since then I’ve held on to the fear that one day, I too may spontaneously combust…it’s been like 25 years since that episode aired😅
Yes and there' s still debate on why it happens and I believe scientists have their therioes on it why it happens but there are still no solid answers to it.
I read the “unidentified” guy didn’t wash ashore, he was propped up against a sea wall. Wouldn’t the slip of paper have fallen apart if it had been submerged in ocean water?
Tamam Shud is more commonly known as The Somerton Man as he was found on Somerton Beach. Such an interesting story. I live in the area and visited his grave last year.
The Somerton Man is one mystery I’d love to see solved. My grandmother lived at Somerton at the time so it holds a certain amount of extra fascination for me.
While officials have yet to confirm, reports have just come out that the identity of the Somerton Man has been discovered! Give it a google, they are saying his name was Carl Webb, an electrical engineer from Melbourne. The BBC has an article on it.
2:39 I heard about that bridge. I wonder why they didn't install the rail guard or a cross wire fence to protect the dogs when they already know a lot of dogs have fallen so far.
Having grown up in the area and spending time at the Spook Light, there is one phenomenon that most researchers don't mention: a lot of the "witnesses" were drunk. That was a big time party road in the 80's when I was there as it was the same in the 50's when my mother and uncle where there too. My uncle actually saw it, but my mom never did and neither did I. But oh, the memories I made of all the other stuff that went on out there!
In fact, the problem with a lot of "mysteries", especially but not only from a distant past, is that there is nothing but "accounts" and "it is said" and "reportedly". In those cases I didn't even listen to the rest of the story. The kind of mystery I prefer, the one that gives me goosebumps, is not the "it is said that one morning a huge pink rock was seen hanging in the air and then disappeared" type, but rather the "there is this small blank hole in a perfectly solid, widely documented rock and nobody can explain how it was made" type.
The Philadelphia experiment is one of my favourite. Talks about a navy American shp that was said to be able to be cloaked invisible and teleported from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Norfolk, Virginia. During one of the trials (I think) the whole ship disappeared. it appeared a few days later but the crew was either dead (by unknown causes) or was infused with the walls of the ship. Theories say it moved to another dimension where it had some extraterrestrial fight and then teleported back. There are claims of people years and years later, encountering three men in WWII navy suits. They appeared out of thin air in the middle of the room for a few seconds, only to disappear without a trace a few seconds later
@@amywilson2741 I was going to say Twerking, but dancing plaque sounds so much more fun. Dentists Worldwide are struggling to keep the dancing plaque in check.
@@ThePinkDragon 1987s A.I Coca Cola sales character that some genius thought would also make a good tv show , glitches included. It was the new coke era 85-90 (in more ways than one)
No, it is not "max headroom" that is obscure. The character in the commercials was based on a much more obscure small set of pirate transmissions seen only in one or two states. That is what they are claiming is obscure.
@@miguelEguzman You have it backwards. The hack came after the commercials and the TV series featuring the character. The pirate broadcast wasn't until 6 months after the show premiered.
That Brazil one is really interesting, Brazil was discovered by accident. A Portuguese sailor was attempting to round the horn and got blown off course. We have evidence that Carthaginian ships sailed those waters. It’s not crazy to suspect an ancient or medieval mariner did the same thing
- The Pied Piper of Hamelin: the earliest written history of the city of Hamelin begins with this line: "It has been 100 years since our children vanished". This was written in 1384. Whatever happened to the children was traumatic enough to have been recorded in writing and in the form of a stained-glass window in the town's church. An oral account of the incident was written down supposedly in the late 1200s, but the book was lost in the 17th century. To this day, nothing is known of the fate of Hamelin's children beyond the Grimm Brothers' fairy tale. - The Kelly Farmhouse Incident: this is perhaps the most credible evidence of a potentential alien encounter with multiple witnesses, independently coaberated accounts from these witnesses, and physical evidence. The details are too long to go into here, but no credible explanation of that night's encounter has ever been offered.
I've actually heard about Benjamin Bathurst. Eerie stuff. I've heard several theories, some of them going as far as teleportation/space-time travel/displacement. I've heard him mentioned in a book alongside cases such as 1593 transported soldier legend/Gil Perez and The 1880 Mystery of David Lang.
Those “spook lights” exist in random areas throughout the Ozark Mountains. Not just in the areas mentioned here. I’ve seen them on several occasions & it’s definitely not due to headlights. Because they can be seen in areas too far from highways for that to be feasible. Plus, they can stay steady in place for indefinite periods of time & then suddenly move away & disappear.
A year late... but couldn't people have just driven cars to certain spots and sat there with the car on? Maybe brought fog lights with them? Sounds incredibly stupid, but I've heard- and seen- far dumber things.
@@MLPIceberg No. I don’t believe so. Where I’ve seen them are in forested areas where there aren’t roads. However, if it had been headlights, you’d be able to see the beams. There weren’t any beams. Just little balls of light. And it wasn’t where the light was hitting something. They’d hover in the air & then float away. I don’t know what they are. I can’t explain them.
@jose ramiro reynoso ruiz the frog boys is a group of five South Korean boys between the ages of 9 and 13 years old who were murdered on march 26 1991, to this day the case hasn't been solved but just look up the frog boys and there is a documentary about it and there is two parts to the video
So the simplest and most likely explanation is that he was just an ordinary guy with no crime precedings (hence his fingerprints were unrecorded), no documents with him and no dear ones who would have reported him missing, who happened to commit suicide. It makes sense after all.
I've heard of all of these. However, the Max Headroom thing is no big mystery. The actor that did the character was in a short lived TV series for awhile. He also appeared on MTV for a while. The " highjacking" was just a stunt pulled off by the TV station to create an illusion that their programming had been interrupted by an unknown source. It turns out that a few bored TV technical persons actually did it. Today we would call them hackers.
it's a fascinating mystery that i've been really interested in since I was a child as I live at Somerton Beach. I'm sure the mystery lady has the answers, as a nurse in Sydney she actually gave the same book to a soldier, though when contacted he still had his copy with all pages intact!
That Max Headroom (meaning "maximum clearance" under bridges, entering tunnels and car parks, etc in the UK) is a weird one. And a pretty good tv show, starring Matt Frewer.
@@aliengranpa nope, I brought them for school and showed them to my friends, but when it was lunch time we went down to the cafeteria and when I came back, my cards were gone from my backbag
On number 12, that reminded me of a science book that my mom had back then where they had a close up picture of an alien in the hospital. I remember that they failed to keep it alive and burried it in a grave yard. The picture actually has haunted me ever since I was a child and I still want to know what that book was called again, it was out sometime in the 2000's and was made by Nat Geo. If anybody knows what I'm talking about, please comment on this..
Number 13: The sleeping sickness, I knew about due to film “Awakenings” starring Robin Williams and Robert de Niro, great film, very surprised that Watchmojo didn’t use clips from film during this section.
Some of my favorite mysteries/mysterious people include: The Isdal Woman D.B. Cooper Poe Toaster Kaspar Hauser Jack the Ripper Man in the Iron Mask Man of the Hole Perseus (spy) Fulcanelli Jerome of Sandy Cove Tarrare Wolf Messing Babushka Lady Leatherman (vagabond)
If you guys want coverage of unsolved miseries with leading theories, I highly suggest checking out buzzfeed unsolved. (I prefer the Shane and Ryan version, you can find a compilation of it on yt)
the USS cyclops likely sank due to methane bubbles from the uniquely-formed underwater volcanoes in the bermuda. basically when a ship passes over a stream of bubbles in the water, it suddenly loses buoyancy and sinks like a rock. so a ship that is having no issues sailing through fair weather would appear to just vanish without a trace.
It doesn't help that they tend to repeat the same information in multiple videos. Considering this is top 20, I'm sure they talked about these maybe 5 times before?
@lygophile they could do an entire video just on that hotel she was found dead at. Murders and suicides (mainly suicides) going back almost a century including several unidentified victims.
There were a few I hadn't heard of... But I found one missing on that list: Jennifer Fairgate. They found her body in a hotel in Oslo in 1995, and until this day she remains undentified.
I find it funny that one of the theories about the Voynich manuscript suggests that a bunch of monks got together and forced an alien to write it. What was the purpose or motivation for that? And why an alien of all beings?
That manuscript was either a prank from some 1500s dude with too much free time, or the delirium of a delusional yet extremely intellectually gifted and misunderstood person.
Apparently No 8 (Tamum shud) the "Somerton man" has been named as a Carl "Charles" Webb (not sure if it's Carl or Karl). Found via family genealogy they tested here in Australia. Born in Footscray, VIC in 1905 and apparently there's no details for him after 1945. Doesn't explain all the other questions around how he came to be where he was found, etc and it'll probably make everything much more boring and mundane! Coincidentally, I just finished watching a news piece about it just before watching this.
#4 Actually Romans, Greeks, Vikings, all reached the "New World", way before Columbus. There is ample proof. The thing is that unlike Columbus (and Isabella), they didn't have much "use" of it so far from their home lands and understanding of what exactly they found.
The Max Headroom one is the one i remember back in Chicago. Still never got that one yet eh? The guy must have been a real high tech genius of the day and never got caught
Definitely I see some of those signs in the streets down here at New Orleans. To be specific used to be one on the corner of Poydras st and at Charles and one more on Canal st
Think you know of some crazier mysteries that we’ve never heard of?
The biggest mystery is how you guys stay in business with posting the same videos all the time lol
I once found a rainbow in summer, in Vijaypur, in Karnataka, India. It dissapered after I saw it and appeared again later. Wasn't a hallucination, my brother saw it with me later too.
Ironically I thought that the Dyatlov pass incident was going to be #1 but at least I have a bit of information about the green children of woolpit
The Disappearance of Charles Ashmore.
Pogs!
My unsolved mystery is where the heck my socks go when they don’t come out of the dryer
Go Google pics of inside of dryer machine. Your welcome
Look _inside_ the dryer.
Limbo
They are reincarnated as Tupperware lids, of course!
Same thing happens to me, and I keep looking inside the washer, and the dryer.
Rebecca: Welcome to the top 20 mysteries you've never heard of...
Every True Crime Fan: heard it... heard it... heard it... heard it... heard it...
Don't forget everyone who've watched these videos.
Yeah....
Right not one I haven’t heard of smh
Yep.
Rebecca that the name of S.T.A.R special forces unit member from resident evil video game and the game about mysteries and zombies in the outskirts of Raccoon City
Our ancestors: *does anything a bit weird*
Us: "aliens must've been involved"
yeah early humans were smarter, and healthier than us, not medieval humans, i mean like pre-historic. they were in tune with nature, real food from nature, and exercised regularly every day.
bitch bye, I do all that too.
@@ericpabon2458 yeah, like they dont have anything to do if they are bored, they prob dont even know that feeling is called bored, so they do some weird shits
There is an odd connection between two of these stories. The lighthouse with the missing men inspired the 1977 Doctor Who story, "Horror of Fang Rock," in which the Fourth Doctor and his Companion Leela are the only survivors of an event at a lighthouse. That story was playing on a PBS station which was the second station interrupted by the Max Headroom event, and in fact, a couple of seconds of it can be seen in this video before Max pops in.
so cool!
That's pretty cool.
Wow thanks for that tid bit!
yep, i recognised the short segment with Leela and the young lighthouse keeper.
great to see someone else picked up on that.
Here is the thing...Max Headroom was not invented until around 1985 or 1986, so your comment is suspicious.
The real mystery of Overtoun Bridge: why haven’t they put a gate there so dogs can not jump of it?
And let the bridge win?
Right?!?! 😂
Now I remember reading that the unique shape and position of the bridge that that wind causes a dog whistle effect and force the dogs to respond.
Or leash your dog 🤷🏿♂️
@@sergiolobato1798 That's an interesting theory.
On the story of the twins; isn’t that reincarnation and not resurrection?
Was going to post the same thing. it's not resurrection (which is bringing the dead back to life), but reincarnation (being born again into a different body).
Yep, reincarnation not resurrection.
*sigh* Yes, that's totally what they mean. You'd think at least one person who read this script would have caught that.
@@laceyleighlovell2967 They had one job🤦🏾♀️
that and, i bet its a hoax and they're pretending.
The green children is one that's stuck with me since I read about it in my grandmother's Reader's Digest Mysteries of the Unexplained books as a kid.
I read it in "The Book of Lists." Their blurb said the cave was in Spain. It's still intriguing either way. Of course, it's a legend going back nearly a thousand years. So, who knows? "The Book of Lists" contained lots of apocrypha.
The Children of Woolpit were Belgians orphans that had lost their parents and lived in the woods. The only food they had to eat were the wild plants in the forest and this turned their skin green. The boy died of malnutrition, and the girl lived to be a domestic servant of the local knight, and died of old age. In English history they taught that the villagers eventually found someone who spoke Flemish, and also found the bodies of their parents. The parents were also human. This story is referred in "Essential British History" and "Horrible Histories". The Horrible histories version is more fun.
Ohh! How about the Mystery of the Missing Roku Remote? I’d like that one solved🙋🏼♀️
Yes.
I always hated them and their tiny remotes. My first experience with a roku was at a buddies house and I lost his remote 47 times that day
Sleeping sickness - this happened to my great uncle when he was 4. When he came out of it, he was permanently 4/5 years old developmentally. He outlived his siblings, and was very much loved & spoiled by all of us until he passed away. Even though he was 89yo, it was like losing a child in our extended family. He was a sweet soul who radiated with kindness.
anyone who's seen horrible histories knows about the Children of Woolpit. They were immigrants from another country who's parents supposedly died on the journey. The kids then lived off of whatever they found in the forest for god knows how long and it likely pigmented their skin a greenish colour. The boy died of an illness which was unknown to the people of Woolpit and the girl went on to be a maid.
Yes! The "Scary Stories" sketch on them (Season 2 Episode 3) explains it just as you said. For those who aren't familiar with Horrible Histories, it's streaming on Hulu. As a history teacher, I obviously highly recommend it!
I live in Woolpit and it's quite a strange thing to happen but apparently they were from a Belgium cloth mill and the dyes they used ended up dying their skin but at least that's what everyone says round here
*God
I assumed since they only ate one kind of bean that turned them green, like flamingos with shrimp...
Yup!
December:
WatchMojo: _hey guys, Merry Christmas! let's talk about the creepiest and mysterious stuff out there this month!!!_
Ay, keep Christmas out of October then 🤷🏽♂️ lmao
This year is all a blur...no? We'll be having seasonal content soon! ...and it won't be "Top 10 Creepiest Elves" or anything like that, we promise!
No. 1 was the first story that came to mind.
@@WatchMojo
seasonal content sounds like a good way to end this year.
Though i wouldn't put it past you guys if you legit did a _creepiest elves_ video
@@WatchMojo I've always wanted to @ watch mojo, and I just did!
Have you ever heard of the mystery of random self combustion, there’s a number of people who just random lit on fire inside their torso and burned to death. It’s really crazy
Yep, spontaneous human combustion, scary stuff!
@Jarrod Fuchs, et al, I think that spontaneous human combustion happens when a chemical reaction happens that makes humans go kaboom, just like the chemical reactions in bombs. Also, if you want proof of that being real, just look at giant whale carcasses that explode as they compose, and/or are helped to be forced to explode by human means. I also would not doubt that a natural variant of something that is chemically related to nitroglycerin, and/or methamphetamine, and/or some other type of explosive material, somehow forms in the body. However, I am neither a scientist, nor am I a doctor, but, if I were one of those things, then I definitely would not rule them out, though.
Unsolved mysteries did an episode on this!Ever since then I’ve held on to the fear that one day, I too may spontaneously combust…it’s been like 25 years since that episode aired😅
Yes and there' s still debate on why it happens and I believe scientists have their therioes on it why it happens but there are still no solid answers to it.
I read the “unidentified” guy didn’t wash ashore, he was propped up against a sea wall. Wouldn’t the slip of paper have fallen apart if it had been submerged in ocean water?
Was thinking the samw
I like the Scottish accent switch when saying “Overtoun” 😂
The Somerton man wasn't found washed up on the beach. His body was dry, and leaning against a wall.
Just exactly what I said. They are not great at fact checks.
And they know who he is now.
Tamam Shud is more commonly known as The Somerton Man as he was found on Somerton Beach.
Such an interesting story. I live in the area and visited his grave last year.
Neat
The Somerton Man is one mystery I’d love to see solved. My grandmother lived at Somerton at the time so it holds a certain amount of extra fascination for me.
While officials have yet to confirm, reports have just come out that the identity of the Somerton Man has been discovered! Give it a google, they are saying his name was Carl Webb, an electrical engineer from Melbourne. The BBC has an article on it.
DYK
The Dancing Plague of 1518 was changed its name to The Party Rock Anthem in 2011.
Number 8 was just recently solved. He was a man from Footscray, Australia. DNA tests found who he was from his relatives
Aaaand he didn’t ‘wash up’. He drank his poison and sat on the beach.
2:39 I heard about that bridge. I wonder why they didn't install the rail guard or a cross wire fence to protect the dogs when they already know a lot of dogs have fallen so far.
It's probably got some sort of historical importance making them unable to put up fences and sruff
@@tomoleary9592 still. .
My dog also tries to jump off of a certain bridge. But she's too small to make the jump.
or just keep your dog on a leash
@The cleaner dogs get off leashes to you know 🙄
So happy that @watchmojo doesn’t play the eerie background music but a jolly one lol
The dancing plague mystery should be revealed by now, it's definitely MDMA.
Hahaha 🤣 that’s been my experience
Diversions .
And Tim Burton
Definitely a herb or something
In all seriousness it was the herb or whatever it's no mystery
Mysterious event occurs.
Old church lady: could it be....SATAN?!?
Gojira!
Legend!
never fails lmao
Deep voice with sulfurous smelling breath "maaaayyybe..... I dunno, was it me?"
Spongebob: It was an ALASKAN . . . BULL . . . WORM!
Having grown up in the area and spending time at the Spook Light, there is one phenomenon that most researchers don't mention: a lot of the "witnesses" were drunk. That was a big time party road in the 80's when I was there as it was the same in the 50's when my mother and uncle where there too. My uncle actually saw it, but my mom never did and neither did I. But oh, the memories I made of all the other stuff that went on out there!
In fact, the problem with a lot of "mysteries", especially but not only from a distant past, is that there is nothing but "accounts" and "it is said" and "reportedly". In those cases I didn't even listen to the rest of the story. The kind of mystery I prefer, the one that gives me goosebumps, is not the "it is said that one morning a huge pink rock was seen hanging in the air and then disappeared" type, but rather the "there is this small blank hole in a perfectly solid, widely documented rock and nobody can explain how it was made" type.
What else went on out there??? U piqued My curiosity 😺
@@FawnaFuller Oh, you know, the typical "sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll." What else were bored small-town kids gonna do in the summer evenings?
The Philadelphia experiment is one of my favourite. Talks about a navy American shp that was said to be able to be cloaked invisible and teleported from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Norfolk, Virginia. During one of the trials (I think) the whole ship disappeared. it appeared a few days later but the crew was either dead (by unknown causes) or was infused with the walls of the ship. Theories say it moved to another dimension where it had some extraterrestrial fight and then teleported back. There are claims of people years and years later, encountering three men in WWII navy suits. They appeared out of thin air in the middle of the room for a few seconds, only to disappear without a trace a few seconds later
Sounds like the movie, Philadelphia Experiment or an episode of Quantum Leap...
Interesting and informative yet very freaking creepy and disturbing
The sleeping sickness seemed to be related to a long term effect that some patients that went through the Spanish flu suffered.
Long term Spanish flu 😷
We should have Gotten the dancing plaque instead of COVID-19
We did! Ever heard of tiktok?
@@amywilson2741 lols
@@amywilson2741 I was going to say Twerking, but dancing plaque sounds so much more fun. Dentists Worldwide are struggling to keep the dancing plaque in check.
Seriously. Would’ve been more fun
Seriously dancing helps with weight loss.
Love the Golden Girls reference for #5 🤣
"Never heard of..."
Mentions Max Headroom... -_-
Obscure, I head of him
Only through Whang. But hey, known is known
@@ThePinkDragon you "head" of him 🤔😆
The wording used offends a little...
"Obscure"? Really show the audience watchmojo is aiming for...teens and 20 year olds...😑😑😑😑
@@ThePinkDragon 1987s A.I Coca Cola sales character that some genius thought would also make a good tv show , glitches included. It was the new coke era 85-90 (in more ways than one)
I especially like the one where there tripping on shrooms and can't stop dancing.
One mystery I can't ever figure out id why I'm still subbed to this channel lol
I got out a couple of years ago. This is the first mojo I’ve watched in months.
Then unsubscribe.
I am still subscribed. I used to watch to these videos every day. I know watch their videos once a month.
Max Headroom wasn't obscure. He had his own TV show and was on just about every Coke commercial at the time.
Yeah, I noticed that too!
For some people they still consider him obscure due to how short his popularity was.
For young people he's considered obscure due to not knowing about him
No, it is not "max headroom" that is obscure. The character in the commercials was based on a much more obscure small set of pirate transmissions seen only in one or two states. That is what they are claiming is obscure.
@@miguelEguzman You have it backwards. The hack came after the commercials and the TV series featuring the character. The pirate broadcast wasn't until 6 months after the show premiered.
That Brazil one is really interesting, Brazil was discovered by accident. A Portuguese sailor was attempting to round the horn and got blown off course. We have evidence that Carthaginian ships sailed those waters. It’s not crazy to suspect an ancient or medieval mariner did the same thing
On the Taman Shud case, he didn't wash up in the beach. He was found kind of laying against the wall.
- The Pied Piper of Hamelin: the earliest written history of the city of Hamelin begins with this line: "It has been 100 years since our children vanished". This was written in 1384. Whatever happened to the children was traumatic enough to have been recorded in writing and in the form of a stained-glass window in the town's church. An oral account of the incident was written down supposedly in the late 1200s, but the book was lost in the 17th century. To this day, nothing is known of the fate of Hamelin's children beyond the Grimm Brothers' fairy tale.
- The Kelly Farmhouse Incident: this is perhaps the most credible evidence of a potentential alien encounter with multiple witnesses, independently coaberated accounts from these witnesses, and physical evidence. The details are too long to go into here, but no credible explanation of that night's encounter has ever been offered.
I've actually heard about Benjamin Bathurst. Eerie stuff. I've heard several theories, some of them going as far as teleportation/space-time travel/displacement. I've heard him mentioned in a book alongside cases such as 1593 transported soldier legend/Gil Perez and The 1880 Mystery of David Lang.
Finally, someone talks about The Big Grey Man!
Those “spook lights” exist in random areas throughout the Ozark Mountains. Not just in the areas mentioned here. I’ve seen them on several occasions & it’s definitely not due to headlights. Because they can be seen in areas too far from highways for that to be feasible. Plus, they can stay steady in place for indefinite periods of time & then suddenly move away & disappear.
I watched them from GA from 2017-2018/2019 before it disappeared
A year late... but couldn't people have just driven cars to certain spots and sat there with the car on? Maybe brought fog lights with them? Sounds incredibly stupid, but I've heard- and seen- far dumber things.
@@MLPIceberg No. I don’t believe so. Where I’ve seen them are in forested areas where there aren’t roads. However, if it had been headlights, you’d be able to see the beams. There weren’t any beams. Just little balls of light. And it wasn’t where the light was hitting something. They’d hover in the air & then float away. I don’t know what they are. I can’t explain them.
A very interesting video !!! Loved it !!
I'm surprised no one talks about the Frog boys and the Dyatlov Pass incident
@jose ramiro reynoso ruiz the frog boys is a group of five South Korean boys between the ages of 9 and 13 years old who were murdered on march 26 1991, to this day the case hasn't been solved but just look up the frog boys and there is a documentary about it and there is two parts to the video
Well it did say mysteries you haven't heard of and the dyatlov incident is pretty well known
I didn’t know frog boys but I’m very familiar with Dyatlov Pass. I was hoping it’d be on here
Do you watch Grazy Grace?
Dyatlov Pass has been done death
"Tamam Shud" (correct form: tamaam shod), means "it's over". It sounds like a suicide note hen you hear it in Persian in this context.
Yup. In the autopsy I beleive he we was discovered to be terminally ill. I assume he came to see the nurse he knew before dying by suicide.
So the simplest and most likely explanation is that he was just an ordinary guy with no crime precedings (hence his fingerprints were unrecorded), no documents with him and no dear ones who would have reported him missing, who happened to commit suicide. It makes sense after all.
I've heard of all of these. However, the Max Headroom thing is no big mystery. The actor that did the character was in a short lived TV series for awhile. He also appeared on MTV for a while. The " highjacking" was just a stunt pulled off by the TV station to create an illusion that their programming had been interrupted by an unknown source. It turns out that a few bored TV technical persons actually did it. Today we would call them hackers.
Love it :) keep it up
omg,,, i remember that max headrum shit. i was watching tv when it happened and even as a kid we found it creepy as hell.
In the Taman Shud case, the body was found on the beach. It was not washed up.
it's a fascinating mystery that i've been really interested in since I was a child as I live at Somerton Beach. I'm sure the mystery lady has the answers, as a nurse in Sydney she actually gave the same book to a soldier, though when contacted he still had his copy with all pages intact!
I've definitely heard of the Overtoun Bridge, Tamum Shud, Max Headroom and Voynisch Manuscript.
I love WatchMojo but they’ve done most of these mysteries in their previous videos
That Max Headroom (meaning "maximum clearance" under bridges, entering tunnels and car parks, etc in the UK) is a weird one. And a pretty good tv show, starring Matt Frewer.
Worth watching & learning thanks 💖
Merry Christmas everyone ⛄🎅
Number 1. Who stole my pokemon cards
Your parents probably threw them away because you got too old for pokemon..just a th thought. 😁
@@aliengranpa nope, I brought them for school and showed them to my friends, but when it was lunch time we went down to the cafeteria and when I came back, my cards were gone from my backbag
Aww bruh that was team rocket
@@wayco sad part was that one of my friends took it because I only showed it to my friends and 5 years later I still don’t know who took it
@@ohwoahthatscrazy same shit happened to me and i had all the first gen holographics
#19 is the "ghost light" 😆
On number 12, that reminded me of a science book that my mom had back then where they had a close up picture of an alien in the hospital. I remember that they failed to keep it alive and burried it in a grave yard. The picture actually has haunted me ever since I was a child and I still want to know what that book was called again, it was out sometime in the 2000's and was made by Nat Geo. If anybody knows what I'm talking about, please comment on this..
Great work Watch Mojo!
“It doesn’t even live here” 😂😂
LOL, the way you said "COUNTing doown"
the greatest mystery of our time is where to get un-biased news
Associated Press (AP) is still pretty good.
Love this channel. Do a top 10 80s songs or hair bands. Please
Number 13: The sleeping sickness, I knew about due to film “Awakenings” starring Robin Williams and Robert de Niro, great film, very surprised that Watchmojo didn’t use clips from film during this section.
I had heard of seven of these.
My missing keys mystery, they in the pocket of the coat I'm wearing, all the while looking for my glasses that are on top of my head.......
I think you also could have included the Malaysia Airlines airplane that disappeared!! That has blown my mind ever since it happened!
Finally a mystery, booyah
Early gang
Yeah omg I love this video
Some of my favorite mysteries/mysterious people include:
The Isdal Woman
D.B. Cooper
Poe Toaster
Kaspar Hauser
Jack the Ripper
Man in the Iron Mask
Man of the Hole
Perseus (spy)
Fulcanelli
Jerome of Sandy Cove
Tarrare
Wolf Messing
Babushka Lady
Leatherman (vagabond)
D. B. Cooper is solved, it's Charles Westmoreland.
Our World is a Mystery since things happened without explanation or even science does not explain
Liiike what
Love this channel but it repeats itself a lot
If you guys want coverage of unsolved miseries with leading theories, I highly suggest checking out buzzfeed unsolved. (I prefer the Shane and Ryan version, you can find a compilation of it on yt)
the USS cyclops likely sank due to methane bubbles from the uniquely-formed underwater volcanoes in the bermuda. basically when a ship passes over a stream of bubbles in the water, it suddenly loses buoyancy and sinks like a rock. so a ship that is having no issues sailing through fair weather would appear to just vanish without a trace.
The Voynich Manuscript has been decoded. Yesh!
And? Please don't keep us hanging, what did they discover?
Thank you for this video. Now we can know what mischief loki did in past.
I'VE ACTUALLY HEARD OF MOST OF THIS MYSTERIES BECAUSE OF WATCHMOJO LOL
Watchmojo always makes these daring claims that they are going to tell me something I never heard of and they usually fail. Today was no differnt.
It doesn't help that they tend to repeat the same information in multiple videos. Considering this is top 20, I'm sure they talked about these maybe 5 times before?
And yet you keep following them so they win. 🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️
It's a mystery how they keep doing that!
Why do you watch it then?
Me - wanna study for exams
RUclips - we won't let him
Watch Mojo: ...you've never heard of.
Me, a complete paranormal nerd: Has heard of all of them.
I'm a paranermal nord.
Good for you
So less "Mysteries You've Never Heard Of" more "Popular Mysteries Amongst the Unresolved Mysteries Community"
@lygophile they could do an entire video just on that hotel she was found dead at. Murders and suicides (mainly suicides) going back almost a century including several unidentified victims.
Love Mojo
Yo, Sleeping Sickness is like a bad case of sleep paralysis.
There were a few I hadn't heard of... But I found one missing on that list: Jennifer Fairgate. They found her body in a hotel in Oslo in 1995, and until this day she remains undentified.
This should be " mysteries you've already heard of "
I was just thinking that I have seen Simon Whistler videos about nearly all of these.
I Know Right
For real
Mystery creates wonder, and wonder is the basis of man's desire to understand. Mystery abounds where we seek answers the most.
Nice
I find it funny that one of the theories about the Voynich manuscript suggests that a bunch of monks got together and forced an alien to write it. What was the purpose or motivation for that? And why an alien of all beings?
😂
That manuscript was either a prank from some 1500s dude with too much free time, or the delirium of a delusional yet extremely intellectually gifted and misunderstood person.
That UFO was funny scooting around the universe but run into a windmill. LOL
One idea for the dog bridge: why not install plexiglass panels on the bridge to prevent dogs from jumping off to their deaths?
That would ruin the fun
Or stop taking dogs there?
@@pablobob4759 Um... you doin' ok bud?
@@pablobob4759 But it would save many dog's lives.
@@AxtroLeaf yea hun xxx
That max headroom one gave me chills. So creepy looking
Me too
I'd like to believe that the case about the twins is the souls of the deceased children returning back to their parents.
Apparently No 8 (Tamum shud) the "Somerton man" has been named as a Carl "Charles" Webb (not sure if it's Carl or Karl). Found via family genealogy they tested here in Australia. Born in Footscray, VIC in 1905 and apparently there's no details for him after 1945. Doesn't explain all the other questions around how he came to be where he was found, etc and it'll probably make everything much more boring and mundane! Coincidentally, I just finished watching a news piece about it just before watching this.
#4 Actually Romans, Greeks, Vikings, all reached the "New World", way before Columbus. There is ample proof.
The thing is that unlike Columbus (and Isabella), they didn't have much "use" of it so far from their home lands and understanding of what exactly they found.
Oh my god I am not late while I have notifications off
6:09 this is what happens when you lock up the dream lord for 70 years. 😉😂
Thought of that too!
@@toshirodragon I’m sorry. I had to. I started reading Sandman 7 months ago and I’ve been hooked ever since! 🤣
@@darkangel7589 No apology needed! I love Sandman too!
I'm from Pascagoula. I great mystery as well as the Singing River. Love a good mystery.
I live near there too and I'm pretty positive the story about the sisters is about the old Biloxi hospital
How do you name a vessel for transportation "the cyclops" and not expect something weird to happen
Max headroom invasion has always creeped me out sooo much.
Me too,I couldn't watch it
ive heard of the max headroom hijack bc for some reason its in like 5000 watchmojo videos
The Max Headroom one is the one i remember back in Chicago. Still never got that one yet eh? The guy must have been a real high tech genius of the day and never got caught
Hooves? Moonshiners used to wear cow hoof shoes..
Definitely I see some of those signs in the streets down here at New Orleans. To be specific used to be one on the corner of Poydras st and at Charles and one more on Canal st
"Mysteries you've never heard of" 1/2 of them have already been mentioned on this channel
Love the pronunciation of "Overtoun"!
The Aurora, TX event was the inspiration for the movie "Cowboys vs. Aliens".
Interesting
Zenna Henderson also used it as the inspiration for her "The People" series of stories.