Victims and Case Files Victims Yuri Doroshenko,Yuri Krivonischenko,Igor Dyatlov,Zinaida Kolmogorova,Rustem Slobodin,Lyudmila Dubinina,Semyon Zolotaryov,Aleksander Kolevatov,Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle Autopsies, photos, documents, discussion 511Posts
Victims of the red revolution: The haunting faces of prisoners worked to death in Stalin's slave camps. The four camps where the bulk of the labor army in the Urals was located are Ivdel, N. Tagil, Krasnoturyinsk and Chelyabinsk. See the photos → ...
Well, there is at least as much uncertainty about what the Russians were doing with their atomic and thermonuclear weapons in that area in those days, as there is about exactly what type of radiation and how much was found on the Dyatlov pass victims. Since we don't know anything about ...
A snow avalanche hypothesis was proposed, among other theories, but was found to be inconsistent with the evidence of a lower-than-usual slope angle, scarcity of avalanche signs, uncertainties about the trigger mechanism, and abnormal injuries of the victims. The challenge of explaining these ...
Given this uncertainty, it is also possible1 that the thorax injuries were the result of a later snow impact in a very steep ravine where the bodies of the victims, escaping the avalanche area, were found. Solving the Dyatlov Pass mystery is an enormous task, which is far beyond the ...
and unusual injuries of the victims, such an avalanche is indeed a possible explanation. One important ingredient of our proposed mechanism is the progressive wind-blown snow accumulation on the slope above the hikers’ tent. Equally significantly, the topography of the slope is irregular, built of...
The Dyatlov Pass incident left nine Russian hikers dead in 1959. Now thanks to "Frozen," the mystery has been solved.
Hypothermiawas the only cause of death medical examiners were certain about. The other cause was reported as an‘unknown compelling force.’The injuries some of the hikers had were very much alike to those ofcar crash victims, the examiners said. ...
The Dyatlov Pass incident left nine Russian hikers dead in 1959. Now thanks to "Frozen," the mystery has been solved.