If you could witness three mysteries after

Where Amelia Earhart crashed
Where Jimmy Hoffa was buries
To see the first fish that walked on water, so I can throw that motherfucker back to avoid taxes and working for a living
 
Where Amelia Earhart crashed
Where Jimmy Hoffa was buries
To see the first fish that walked on water, so I can throw that motherfucker back to avoid taxes and working for a living
Amelia was one I was thinking of also
 
Yeah same It’s very interesting case but I’m sure if was brother or one of the parents

Roswell a good one
Yeah I think it was most likely the dad and the mom helped cover it up. Cops did such a poor.job they got away with it.
 
Dinosaurs were killed by meteor
Pyramids were build by slaves
Jesus didn’t ressurect/ was just in temporary coma

Nothing special there
All three sound pretty special to me. A celestial body impact that caused mass extinction of the dominant life form? Engineering marvels? A(n alleged) medical anomaly that coincided with (purported) prophecies? Whoa.
I wouldn't say he knows magic but he cautious against it's use and seems to be quite aware of how to spot users and artifacts
Christopher Lee also warned of magic use. He took personal possession of some of Aleister Crowley's writings and materials. That man was James Bond. He knew some shit.
 
I heard reptilian aliens were living on earth along with dinosaurs but some enemy humanoid aliens sent the meteor or some other weapon to kill them, I forgot exactly how, but that's the word on the street.
 
Is there life after death?
Sasquatch
Who killed OJ's wife and what was in the envelope judge ito had
Area 51, do we have possession of alien technology
Epstein Island
 
Amelia was one I was thinking of also


Oh I must've just skimmed the headline at the time. I thought they were pretty convinced they'd found her.



A new forensic analysis of bones found on a remote Pacific island 80 years ago strongly suggests they belonged to Amelia Earhart, NPR reports. Remains found on Nikumaroro in 1940 were originally ruled out as belonging to the famed pilot, as they were thought to be male. Now, a scientist has run the bone's measurements through modern forensics software, comparing them to estimations of Earhart's bone lengths based on her clothing and photographs. The analysis found that not only are the bones female, they match with Earhart better than with 99% of other individuals. Unfortunately, the bones themselves have long been lost, so a more detailed analysis including DNA testing may never be possible.



it wasn't just that article either in regards to Nikumaroro being her final resting place.


A photograph from a 2009 expedition in the Pacific Ocean around Nikumaroro Island — a remote atoll between New Zealand and Hawaii — appears to show an engine cover buried underwater that could have been part of the boundary-breaking aviator’s plane, the Daily Mail reported Saturday.

“There is an object in the photo that appears to be a Lockheed Electra engine cowling,” Ric Gillespie, executive director of the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, told the outlet.

A forensic imaging specialist is analyzing the photo, according to Gillespie, whose group has led the Earhart Project, which has been looking into the 1937 disappearance of Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, since 1988.


certainly they can be wrong but it seems the most solid theory.

Three years after she disappeared, an expedition to Nikumaroro recovered several human bones, including a skull. A University of Tennessee researcher examined the bones and determined they were likely Earhart’s. The bones have more similarity to Earhart than to 99% of reference sample individuals, according to the 2018 study published in Forensic Anthropology. No remains of Noonan’s were found, though a sextant box similar to the one he carried was among the remains. The aircraft itself was never found.

Most tantalizing of all: fragments of a shoe--a heel, partial sole and brass shoelace eyelet--apparently from a woman’s blucher oxford, size 9. Photos of the time show Earhart wearing such a shoe.


They arrived in New Guinea on June 29 and headed for tiny Howland Island, 2,556 miles away, on July 2.

amelia_route_map7_06.jpg


obviously it's not 100%, I doubt it ever will be but does seem pretty likely/ plausible to me
 
Oh I must've just skimmed the headline at the time. I thought they were pretty convinced they'd found her.



A new forensic analysis of bones found on a remote Pacific island 80 years ago strongly suggests they belonged to Amelia Earhart, NPR reports. Remains found on Nikumaroro in 1940 were originally ruled out as belonging to the famed pilot, as they were thought to be male. Now, a scientist has run the bone's measurements through modern forensics software, comparing them to estimations of Earhart's bone lengths based on her clothing and photographs. The analysis found that not only are the bones female, they match with Earhart better than with 99% of other individuals. Unfortunately, the bones themselves have long been lost, so a more detailed analysis including DNA testing may never be possible.



it wasn't just that article either in regards to Nikumaroro being her final resting place.


A photograph from a 2009 expedition in the Pacific Ocean around Nikumaroro Island — a remote atoll between New Zealand and Hawaii — appears to show an engine cover buried underwater that could have been part of the boundary-breaking aviator’s plane, the Daily Mail reported Saturday.

“There is an object in the photo that appears to be a Lockheed Electra engine cowling,” Ric Gillespie, executive director of the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, told the outlet.

A forensic imaging specialist is analyzing the photo, according to Gillespie, whose group has led the Earhart Project, which has been looking into the 1937 disappearance of Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, since 1988.


certainly they can be wrong but it seems the most solid theory.

Three years after she disappeared, an expedition to Nikumaroro recovered several human bones, including a skull. A University of Tennessee researcher examined the bones and determined they were likely Earhart’s. The bones have more similarity to Earhart than to 99% of reference sample individuals, according to the 2018 study published in Forensic Anthropology. No remains of Noonan’s were found, though a sextant box similar to the one he carried was among the remains. The aircraft itself was never found.

Most tantalizing of all: fragments of a shoe--a heel, partial sole and brass shoelace eyelet--apparently from a woman’s blucher oxford, size 9. Photos of the time show Earhart wearing such a shoe.


They arrived in New Guinea on June 29 and headed for tiny Howland Island, 2,556 miles away, on July 2.

View attachment 1024390


obviously it's not 100%, I doubt it ever will be but does seem pretty likely/ plausible to me
Chances are she lost at sea be pretty crazy if she ended up in a small island in middle of no where … sucks they lost the alleged bones .. not sure how they did that
 
All three sound pretty special to me. A celestial body impact that caused mass extinction of the dominant life form? Engineering marvels? A(n alleged) medical anomaly that coincided with (purported) prophecies? Whoa.

Christopher Lee also warned of magic use. He took personal possession of some of Aleister Crowley's writings and materials. That man was James Bond. He knew some shit.
Of course, but we already know what happened. It's not a mystery.
 
Chances are she lost at sea be pretty crazy if she ended up in a small island in middle of no where … sucks they lost the alleged bones .. not sure how they did that
Somehow the misplacement of bones seems to be quite a common occurrence throughout history and investigations..

It's always baffled me. Either there's a lot of lying ( highly plausible ) or a lot of mismanagement ( also plausible ).


Probably a bit of both.
 
Oh I must've just skimmed the headline at the time. I thought they were pretty convinced they'd found her.



A new forensic analysis of bones found on a remote Pacific island 80 years ago strongly suggests they belonged to Amelia Earhart, NPR reports. Remains found on Nikumaroro in 1940 were originally ruled out as belonging to the famed pilot, as they were thought to be male. Now, a scientist has run the bone's measurements through modern forensics software, comparing them to estimations of Earhart's bone lengths based on her clothing and photographs. The analysis found that not only are the bones female, they match with Earhart better than with 99% of other individuals. Unfortunately, the bones themselves have long been lost, so a more detailed analysis including DNA testing may never be possible.



it wasn't just that article either in regards to Nikumaroro being her final resting place.


A photograph from a 2009 expedition in the Pacific Ocean around Nikumaroro Island — a remote atoll between New Zealand and Hawaii — appears to show an engine cover buried underwater that could have been part of the boundary-breaking aviator’s plane, the Daily Mail reported Saturday.

“There is an object in the photo that appears to be a Lockheed Electra engine cowling,” Ric Gillespie, executive director of the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, told the outlet.

A forensic imaging specialist is analyzing the photo, according to Gillespie, whose group has led the Earhart Project, which has been looking into the 1937 disappearance of Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, since 1988.


certainly they can be wrong but it seems the most solid theory.

Three years after she disappeared, an expedition to Nikumaroro recovered several human bones, including a skull. A University of Tennessee researcher examined the bones and determined they were likely Earhart’s. The bones have more similarity to Earhart than to 99% of reference sample individuals, according to the 2018 study published in Forensic Anthropology. No remains of Noonan’s were found, though a sextant box similar to the one he carried was among the remains. The aircraft itself was never found.

Most tantalizing of all: fragments of a shoe--a heel, partial sole and brass shoelace eyelet--apparently from a woman’s blucher oxford, size 9. Photos of the time show Earhart wearing such a shoe.


They arrived in New Guinea on June 29 and headed for tiny Howland Island, 2,556 miles away, on July 2.

View attachment 1024390


obviously it's not 100%, I doubt it ever will be but does seem pretty likely/ plausible to me
No one ever mentions her navigator Fred Noonan
 
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