Duration 12:26

ഭയാനകമായ ഗുഹകൾ മുതൽ സോംബികളുടെ തലയോട്ടികൾ വരെ | 8 Mysterious Places Scientists Still Can't Explain

Published 25 May 2021

Investigator Investigator Malayalam presenting new video about 8 Mysterious Places Scientists Still Can't Explain. In this video we are mainly looking 8 Discoveries That Cannot be Explained! 1)The Rock Tomb of Kapilikaya The present day country of Turkey is home to many well-known megalithic sites such as Gobekli Tepe, Hattusha and Midas Kenti, but it is also home to a much lesser known yet equally impressive ancient site known as “Kapilikaya.” Located about 27 kilometers north of the city of Corum and hidden away inside a mountainous outcropping is an ancient structure known as the “Tomb of Kapilikaya.” It is thought to be a tomb of the Hellenistic period, dating back to approximately the 2nd century B.C. 1 Rising above a gentle stream that flows beneath on the forest floor, a steep trail winds up the left side of the rock outcropping and eventually leads to a platform of stairs located directly in front of the tomb. The tomb is not simply a door shaped façade but is actually a cube shaped structure cut out of the mountain, only connecting to the natural rock around it at a few points. From inside you can actually walk all the way around it or climb up onto its top. The inner chamber of the tomb can only be accessed through entering a small square opening about halfway up the face of the structure. An inscription above the entrance reads “IKEZIOS,” 2 which some believe is attributed to an ancient commander named Ikezius. 2)Cave of Scremes It began with screams of terror in the middle of the night. By the time rescuers traced the wailing to its origin, they found themselves at the jagged mouth of an ancient cave deep in the Belizean countryside. Sixty feet below, down a sheer rockface, an injured looter lay crumpled on the limestone floor. Surrounding him, rescuers would discover after descending by rope, were thousands upon thousands of human bones. The looter would be eventually pulled to safety and taken to a local hospital on that fateful night in 2006, but his misfortune would result in a discovery that may fundamentally rewrite historians’ understanding of Mayan culture. “What we found was a huge collection of human skeleton material, around 9,000 bones,” James Brady, a professor of anthropology at California State University at Los Angeles who has spent decades studying Mayan cave sites, told The Washington Post. “It’s probably the largest collection that has ever been found in a Mayan cave.” 3) The Mummified Dog The mummified dog was a shocking find for the loggers, who were working on cutting the tree into pieces and almost turned it into mulch. here are some things loggers expect to come across when cutting down trees. Bird’s nests and things stuck in the branches seem like a given – a mummified dog in the center of a tree, however, does not. But that’s exactly what a team of loggers with the Georgia Kraft Corp. found while cutting down a tree in the 1980s. The loggers were working on a grove of chestnut oaks in southern Georgia when they found a most unusual sight. After cutting off the top of the tree, and loading it onto a truck for transport, a member of the team happened to peer down the hollow trunk. Inside, he found the perfectly mummified remains of a dog, looking back at him, its teeth still bared in a fight for survival. Experts who studied the carcass concluded that the pup was most likely a hunting dog from the 1960s, who had chased something such as a squirrel through a hole in the roots, and up the center of the hollow tree. The higher the dog got, however, the narrower the tree became. From the position of the dog’s paws, experts believe that it continued to climb until it effectively wedged itself in. Unable to turn around, the dog died. 4)yeti hair In 1951, a British explorer named Eric Shipton looking for an alternative route up Mt. Everest found a footprint that appeared to be hominoid. He took a picture, and the mystery of the Yeti—a Sherpa word for “wild man”—cast a spell over the world. Daniel Taylor, author of Yeti: The Ecology of a Mystery, has been searching for signs of this “Abominable Snowman” in the high Himalayas since he was a child. Talking from his home in West Virginia, Taylor explains what he thinks made that human-like footprint, how his search eventually led to the creation of a national park, and why, in an age where we have become disconnected from nature, we have a deep need to believe in mysteries. 5)Picts From the accounts of Britain made by the classical authors, we know that by the fourth century AD, the predominant people in northern Scotland were referred to as "Picts". Throughout history, these Picts have been shadowy, enigmatic figures. From the outset, they were regarded as savage warriors but by the time the Norsemen were compiling their sagas and histories. in this video we will discuss about 6) Thor's Cave 7) Hanging Coffins China 8) Zombies in Ireland

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