Dyatlov Pass Incident (1 Viewer)

"Paradoxical undressing" seems like a pretty decent explanation for the stripping down part and leaving the tents part. Hypothermia can make you go a bit crazy/delusional so it also seems possible that one of the hikers went bonkers and started attacking some of the others.

Why Freezing to Death Makes You Want To Get Naked
 
Time travelers showed them a pee pee tape.
 
“New” theory about what might have happened:



Plus, I thought these pics of the actual hikers shortly before the incident were kinda cool/creepy:


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His theory makes a lot of sense. It would explain the chaotic ripping of the tint and throwing on whatever clothes they could find is easily explained if they had woken up to a massive explosion sound and ran the heck out of dodge. The missing tongue was probably eaten by an animal. The radiation is the weirdest part. What’s the prevailing theory about that?
 
It's long been suspected among historians, amateur cryptzoologists, Russian, American, or European investigators or "conspiracy theorists" have claimed the Soviets were conducting nuclear or thermonuclear experiments in the area or remote, sparsely-populated regions of the Soviet Union. They theorize the radiation found on some of the survivors in this region of the Urals may have been related to these military radiation tests which also explains why Soviet military intelligence remained so reticent about this incident in these regions.

The Soviets also began recording covert, secret black-OP surveillance operations of UFO sightings, UFO abductions, secret interviews with abductees, Soviet military pilots run-ins with UFO's in mid-70s and went unreported until declassified documents became public after the end of the Cold War.
 
What on Earth happened to these people??


In 1959, nine experienced Russian cross-country skiers — seven men and two women, led by a man named Igor Dyatlov — headed to the Ural Mountains, to a slope called Kholat Syakhl (Mansi language for "Mountain of the Dead") for a rugged, wintry trek. On their way up, they are apparently hit by inclement weather and veer off course and decide to set up camp and wait it out.
Then, something happens. In the middle of the night all nine suddenly leap out of their tents as fast as possible, ripping them open from the inside (not even enough time to untie the doors) and race out into the sub-zero temps, without coats or boots or skis, most in their underwear, some even barefoot or with a single sock or boot. It is 30 degrees below zero, Celsius. A few make it as far as a kilometer and a half down the slope. All nine, as you might expect, quickly die.
Why did they rush out, unable to even grab a coat or blanket? What came at them? The three-month investigation revealed that five of the trekkers died from simple hypothermia, with no apparent trauma at all, no signs of attack, struggle, no outward injuries of any kind. However, two of the other four apparently suffered massive internal traumas to the chest, like you would if you were hit by a car. One's skull was crushed. All four of these were found far from the other five. But still, no signs of external injuries.
One of the women was missing her tongue.
Tests of the few scraps of clothing revealed very high levels of radiation. Evidence found at the campsite indicates the trekkers might've been blinded. Eyewitnesses around the area report seeing "bright flying spheres" in the sky during the same months. Relatives at the funeral swear the skin of their dead loved ones was tanned, tinted dark orange or brown. And their hair had all turned completely gray. The final, official explanation as to what caused such bizarre behavior from otherwise well-trained, experienced mountaineers? An "unknown compelling force."

http://www.moscowtimes.ru/stories/2008/02/04/004.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyatlov_pass_accident
Well, first it happened in Russia, of course. I'm sorry, you get what's coming to you if you go up the "Mountain of the Dead" It's like every stereotypical horror movie.
 

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