DYATLOV PASS - MADNESS IN THE MOUNTAINS feat

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2024
  • / unidentifiedsignal
    / signalfm999
    www.unidentifiedsignal.com/
    Thanks to Dyatlovpass.com and Unknown Compelling Force documentary for the information and imagery.
    The Dyatlov Pass incident (Russian: гибель тургруппы Дятлова, transl. "Death of the Dyatlov Tour Group") was an event in which nine Soviet hikers died in the northern Ural Mountains between February 1 and 2, 1959, under uncertain circumstances. The experienced trekking group from the Ural Polytechnical Institute, led by Igor Dyatlov, had established a camp on the eastern slopes of Kholat Syakhl in the Russian SFSR of the Soviet Union. Overnight, something caused them to cut their way out of their tent and flee the campsite while inadequately dressed for the heavy snowfall and sub-zero temperatures.

Комментарии • 127

  • @mechaplatypus82

    Ew why is Bricky here.

  • @OvercutHood

    To counter your big issue with the missing eyes and tongue. My wildlife biologist friend says they are prime feasting for any and all manner of birds, while the rest takes more effort to get a crack at.

  • @percevilleburns7100

    DK not hitting bricky with a quote and dunking on him for missing it is tragic

  • @Averlest162

    It is also good to remember that them walking calmly out of the tent is EXACTLY what experienced hikers would do in that situation they know they have to move quickly but it’s also very snowy and reportedly windy so to avoid losing each other in a white out they would put a hand on the shoulder of the person in front of them and walk in a straight line to safety

  • @Bollthorn

    I think another reason the Mansi wouldn't want to talk with the Soviet authorities at the time is because I think they were among a lot of ethnic groups that were persecuted during Stalin's purges.

  • @oldeskul
    @oldeskul  +25

    I had read where back in the 90's an experienced group of mountaineers, wilderness survivalists, rescue workers and other experts had figured out what happened. An avalanche most likely happened while they were asleep, which forced them to cut their way out because their shelter had gotten covered and possibly partially collapsed, the reason why the footprints weren't showing that they were running is because some members of their group were injured and they were having to help carry them down the mountain. At some point they stopped on what they thought was safe ground to make a fire, only to realize they were atop a frozen over river and the heat caused the ice to melt, which resulted in some of their number to fall through(four of the bodies were found in a ravine downstream), the ones who either didn't fall in the freezing cold water or had managed to get pulled out, were left in an even worse place and died of exposure or were caught in another avalanche. Ravens, crows and other corvids will peck out the eyes and eat the tongues of exposed bodies.

  • @TocTeplv

    People could not have fun. Oppressive regime of soviets did horrible stuff to people. Soviet union was a military state and hiking is a leisure time. it can happen in western countries , not in soviet Russia. So it's all is just a ruse

  • @Biodeamon

    It could be considered sacred or "evil" because of reasons grounded in reality, like how people in india said "don't visit the swamp, you'll get possessed by evil spirits" and they british laughed then got malaria.

  • @hughsonj

    The actual reason for the incident at Dyatlov Pass is a group of time travelers going back to witness the incident at Dyatlov Pass. Their time machine's cloaking device had a malfunction that caused it to emit dangerous radiation and infrasound. I was told this by a man named John Titor, who was a time explorer of the ill-fated event.

  • @farmerboy916

    If I recall correctly, the best explanation for this one was actually described in detail by another youtuber in their own video on their theory; that this slope on this mountain (the entire side basically) has a specific microclimate that in the winter, can cause conditions that are as cold as the worst parts of antartica with very little warning. We’re talking about a sudden swing to -80. You’ll freeze to death even as the skin on your hands burns from being too close to a fire withour feeling it, can’t open tents, and stumble off of cliffs or gaps in the snow. There’s literally nothing that will save a person who’s caught in that, and all the weirdness is just understandable white noise as people made whatever attempts they can to stay alive in an impossible situation or how they react to their body forcibly shutting down.

  • @warhawk9566

    I gotta say

  • @songsong9558

    Wow DK has great chemistry with this new guest, Bricky. They should host a podcast together.

  • @Bluecho4

    I think my main objection to the "government coverup" theory is that it was never declassified or got talked about after the USSR fell. Like, we know about the Nazino incident (aka "Siberian Cannibal Island"), something verifiably caused, and covered up, by the Soviet government. Even though it was classified for five decades.

  • @user-hs1xb9tv6e

    Its always nice seeing this channel posting a video, and with Bricky as a guest its even better. This will be good.

  • @indy_com
    @indy_com  +17

    My theory here is pretty simple, but explains most of the weirdness:

  • @SpaceMarine4040

    Yuba City (and Yuba County) I hate that I now live near there and that episode is now what I think of every single time it is mentioned. It is now the nearby town that I go, "isn't that where those people died?"

  • @darkmega97

    There's another case similar to this know as the Korovina group incident. That one is even freakier because one person actually survided and spoke about what happened and it just made the whole thing even weirder

  • @oscarlamuela4344

    Regarding sound and it messing with people. It is something that can happen, though it is not extremely dangerous barring a few cases. Someone who is more versed in the matter can correct me on this, but a lot of helicopter pilots from the Vietnam war developed arrhythmia due to the fact that the original Huey had a two-bladed rotor and, at their turn rate, they generate waves that have a similar frequency to that of the human heart, causing it to get f**ked up. So, yeah, sound can be scary sometimes...

  • @ethancoyle724

    Just found this video from my recommendations. Time to binge every single episode. Great show!

  • @louisjarzabek9959

    Another great episode, one of the most comprehensive examinations of this incident I've seen