Five Longtime Mysteries That Now Have Perfectly Reasonable Explanations

Just because something has been a mystery for hundreds of years doesn't necessarily mean that it's supernatural or extraterrestrial. It usually means that we just don't have the know-how to figure it out ...yet. The science of data detection, measurement, and analysis has grown by leaps and bounds in the last couple of decades. With new and powerful microscopes, telescopes, chemical analysis, geolocation, and DNA sequencing, we are busting mysteries left and right. For example, in 1997, scientists detected a low-frequency noise in the ocean they call the Bloop. It sounds like an animal, but is louder than any on earth can produce. Is there a sea monster in the depths we've never found? No, in 2012, it was determined that the sound is meteorological, not biological. It's the normal sound of glaciers breaking.

It's just one of five mysteries that you've read about on the 'net that seemed really intriguing at the time, but the logical explanation that has been discovered isn't as exciting and doesn't draw as many clicks. Four of these mysteries have been solved only since 2012, and the fifth has been determined to be no mystery at all. If you missed the news, you can catch up in a list at Cracked. 

(Image credit: Eros Films)


Sci-Fi Short Film The Move is About a Leap of Faith

The Omeleto short film The Move is supposedly about a couple taking the grand step in their relationship of moving in together. Kate and Todd are excited about finding a roomy apartment they can afford. But the place is a little strange, or let's say, very strange. Maybe that's why it's affordable. What they find provokes shock, fear, and possibilities. You have to wonder what happened to the previous tenants. The viewer is intrigued by an anomaly in the fabric of space and time, and we expect to get a resolution or an explanation, or even an adventure. But that's not what this is about at all. Todd's and Kate's reactions to the weirdness brings their differences to the surface, and we eventually get to the crux of the matter. The Move was written and directed by Erick Kissak and stars Dustin Milligan from Schitt's Creek and Amanda Crew from Silicon Valley. Contains NSFW language.  -via Kottke


The Legend of the Vanishing Hitchhiker Occurs Everywhere, and is Older Than Hitchhiking

If you are in Willow Springs near Chicago and see a woman in white by the side of the road, she may get in the car with you, but then ask to be let out at a cemetery. Then she vanishes. That's Resurrection Mary. But the same story is told in many other locations around the US, with different names. Sometimes the requested stop is a cemetery, or the site of a plane crash, or the hitchhiker just vanishes while still riding. Berkeley students Richard K. Beardsley and Rosalie Hankey found 80 such tales from all over, that mostly originated in the 1930s, a time that many folks were hitchhiking the highways of America looking for work. This appears to be a relatively modern legend, arising spontaneously in different places.  

But it may go back much further. Automobiles and even America itself are recent in the grand scheme of things, but roads and lone travelers go back thousands of years. The setting is classic for a scary tale: traveling at night is already scary, and a stranger on the road can be someone in need or someone very dangerous. And with the vanishing hitchhiker, it's easy to localize the story. Read about the evolution of the vanishing hitchhiker story at Atlas Obscura. Then if you don't have such a legend in your local area, you can start one.  


"Hallelujah" Has Been Thoroughly Ruined

The Leonard Cohen song "Hallelujah" has been around since 1984, but reached global notoriety when it was featured in the 2001 film Shrek. It's been used in quite a few films since then. The tune is beautiful, and the lyrics are somewhat of an an enigma, mixing biblical and sexual themes. Besides, there are many versions of those lyrics, as Cohen took five years to write them.

But Dustin Ballard, also known as There I Ruined It (previously at Neatorama), took away all the ambiguity of Cohen's song by just substituting the lyrics of "Baby Got Back" by Sir Mix-a-Lot. Poetry is poetry, after all, and in this mashup, there's no question of what the song is about. As you might imagine, commenters are now asking for the lyrics of "Hallelujah" be mixed to the music of "Baby Got Back."  

There I Ruined It isn't just Dustin Ballard anymore. The vocals on this song are by Matt Bull, and the entire group does live shows in Texas.


More Clues in a 100-year-old Mount Everest Mystery

Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay are credited as the first people to reach the summit of Mount Everest, in 1953. But were they the first, or just the first to reach the summit and live to tell about it? There is still speculation about the doomed expedition of climbers George Mallory and Andrew "Sandy" Irvine, who were last seen on the Northeast Ridge just below the summit. Then clouds descended, but the two men did not. George Mallory's body was discovered in 1999, without the camera the two had taken to record themselves at the summit.

A team from National Geographic filming a documentary last month made an important discovery. They found Sandy Irvine's left foot, unearthed by the melting Central Rongbuk Glacier. The booted foot has a sock labeled A.C. Irvine. Irvine's great-niece has provided a sample for a DNA test, but the sock label is pretty convincing. Investigators now know where to search for the rest of Irvine's body and possibly the camera. Read an account of the find at BBC. Be warned that the article has a photograph of the boot. -via Metafilter

(In the image above, Irvine is second from the left and Mallory is holding the magazine.)


Tom BetGeorge's 2024 Halloween Light Show Extravaganza



Light display maniac Tom BetGeorge has revealed his 2024 Halloween light show! We've been posting BetGeorge's holiday decorations for years now, as he went from a humble music teacher to running his own light show production business called Magical Light Shows. In that time, he moved to a larger property where he could avoid neighborhood tension, and even experimented with drone shows one year. BetGeorge's 2024 light show is about a half-hour long, and the sequence set to AC/DC's "Thunderstruck" above is only the beginning. Continue reading to see more.

Continue reading

A Tombstone with a Coded Riddle

Suzanne Dryden Kuser knew some secrets, and she took them to her grave. It says right on her gravestone "I still cannot tell you." But that's engraved under a string of intriguing numbers and letters.

Kuser came from a prominent family of politicians; both her father and her brother have Wikipedia entries, as well as many of her other ancestors. "Sukie" herself had quite a career, beginning at the National Security Agency as a cryptologic linguist, then working at the State Department for 58 years. Kuser ended up as the head of the U.S. State Department's Intelligence Reporting Division before retiring. But even then, she was a consultant and reviewed classified documents.

However, the code on her tombstone, while a memorial to her work, was designed to be decodable by anyone interested. Several commenters at reddit figured it out easily. Each word begins with a letter that is linked to the alphabet backwards, meaning a Z would be an A, a Y would be a B, etc. The rest of the letters are numbers, also keyed to the alphabet but in a somewhat more difficult manner. You don't even need the number key because the numbers that are doubled correspond with the doubled letters in the answer, but ThymeIsTight posted a key to make it all clear.

But you don't want to go to all that trouble, so I will tell you what the code actually says. Show Answer


A fitting memorial for a talented public servant.

(Image source: Photo_Shop_Beast)


The Mysteriously Lost, and Finally Found, Memorial Sculpture for John F. Kennedy's Grave

President John F. Kennedy's funeral was held on November 25, 1963, three days after he was assassinated in Dallas. At the conclusion of Kennedy's burial, the military Honor Guard all laid their hats around the burial dome topped with the Eternal Flame, creating an image that no one from that time will forget. To accommodate the crowds of visitors, the gravesite was moved a few years later to a 3.2-acre site with stones paving the grave and a 5-foot circular stone holding the flame.

The hats stayed with the grave for a long time, but no one knows what happened to them. They inspired Jackie Kennedy to commission a permanent memorial sculpture, a project that was managed by her friend Rachel Lambert Mellon, who had designed the White House Rose Garden. The sculpture was designed by Tiffany jeweler Jean Schlumberger to be created by sculptor Louis Féron, and was supposed to be kept secret until its installation. It resembled a wreath of different kinds of wood, rendered in metal, with the military hats. But the memorial sculpture was never installed at the gravesite, and for many years, no one was really sure it was ever produced. That is, until the entire twisted story of the memorial was uncovered, and the sculpture was finally found just this year. We still don't know exactly what went wrong with the plan, but you can read what we now know about Kennedy's memorial sculpture at Smithsonian.  -via Strange Company


Alma Cooper is an Exceptional Woman

(Image source: US Army)

You might call Alma Cooper an overachiever, but it's just life for her. Cooper graduated from West Point in the spring of 2023, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S Army. Her father delivered her oath of office 24 years after he took the same oath. Cooper is now working on her master's degree in data science at Stanford University. Any parent would be proud of such accomplishments in a 22-year-old daughter. But that's just the beginning for Alma Cooper.

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A Machine Built to Destroy a Phone Alarm

If you wake up by a phone alarm, your natural instinct is to make it stop by any means necessary, and if you are too sleepy to function, that may even include destroying the phone. Joseph Herscher of Joseph's Machines (previously at Neatorama) made a chain reaction contraption that tries to do just that. But while the machine works, all it does is move the phone through the course of the device, without harming it at all.

The reason for that is that this is an ad. Herscher got the attention of Casetify, a company that makes protective phone cases. He was glad to construct a Rube Goldberg machine to abuse the phone mercilessly to show how well the case protects it even if it meant his machine didn't quite do the job it was seemingly designed for. Clever. What makes it funny is that the chain reaction machine made more noise than the alarm! And at the end, after all that nonsense, he got up out of bed against his wishes by the actions of the machine anyway. -via Boing Boing


The 2024 Wildlife Photographer(s) of the Year

The image above is titled The Swarm of Life. It depicts tadpoles swimming through a forest of lily pads in Cedar Lake on Vancouver Island. It won Shane Gross the title of Wildlife Photographer of the Year and the winner in the category Wetlands. The Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition is held annually by the Natural History Museum in London, and the top entries will be on exhibit at the museum from October 11 through next June. The Young Grand Title Winner is Alexis Tinker-Tsavalas of Germany for the image below of a two-millimeter springtail insect with a slime mold. It's titled Life Under Dead Wood. 

There are winners named from each of the 18 different categories, too. I was particularly taken with the winner in the Portrait category.



Titled On Watch, it shows a mother lynx with her two grown offspring behind her. Photographer John E. Marriott tracked this family of Canada lynx for a week in the Yukon and captured this image from a distance. Explore the gallery for the winners in the various categories plus highly commended photos, and the top five in the People's Choice award voting. On both pages you can click on an image to bring up information about it. Read more about the competition at NPR. -via Damn Interesting


Milk is White, So Why is Cheese Yellow or Orange?

Cheese is made of milk, which is white, but many of our cheeses are shades of yellow passing into orange. Cow's milk contains beta carotene from the grass they eat, which is orange. The real question should be why milk is white in the first place. Sheep's milk doesn't have nearly as much beta carotene as the milk from cows, which is why cheese made from sheep's milk is almost always white. That same beta carotene is the reason butter from cow's milk is yellow. We really should qualify the assertion by saying cheese made from high quality milk from grass-fed cows is yellow-orange, but cheesemakers have found a way around the question of color (and quality) by making cheese any color they want. People expect a yellowish or orangish cheese, so that's what they will get, one way or another. This video contains a 70-second skippable promotion at 1:05. -via Laughing Squid


The Facts Behind Corn Mazes

The Amazing Maize Maze was the name of the first documented corn maze, which is such an awesome name that it's no wonder it became a thing. You might be surprised that it was so recent, too, in 1993. While mazes have always had entertainment value, they were traditionally made from trees or hedges or stone walls by wealthy people with a long-term plan. But corn, that most American of crops, lends itself well to a temporary seasonal amusement. It's tall enough, grows fast, and is laid out in a grid that makes planning a relatively simple matter. Plus, the layout can be changed every year. Modern technologies like computer-assisted design and GPS enable farmers to cut corn in designs that can double as advertising seen from above.  

If you play your cards right, a corn maze can bring in more money than the corn crop itself. But to be successful at it year after year, the maze has to be challenging enough to get people to buy tickets, but not so challenging that they give up and never return. Besides, getting lost is half the fun! Read about the business of corn mazes, and what to do if you're ever lost in one, at Atlas Obscura.

(Image credit: Mike's Maze)


Rollin' in the Memories with Another Halloween



What makes holidays special are the traditions that surround them. We celebrate the same way every year, with maybe just a little variation until those variations become tradition themselves. For children, it's exciting to recall what happens every year and enjoy it all over again, and for adults, these traditions evoke wonderful memories. Since 1966, part of the tradition of Halloween is watching It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown as Linus once again waits confidently for the Great Pumpkin to arrive at the local pumpkin patch. His annual disappointment doesn't shake his faith that it will happen next year. Meanwhile, Charlie Brown gets rocks in his trick-or-treat bag and Snoopy battles the Red Baron and ends up giving Lucy dog germs in the bobbing for apples game.    

Swedish producer Chetreo remixed portions of the Peanuts TV special using autotune to make a song about Halloween. It's guaranteed to take you back to the autumns of your childhood and the excitement of the one time a year you got to see the show ahead of Halloween. Knowing what will happen doesn't make it any less special. -via Geeks Are Sexy


Crocs for Dogs Are Real

We live in an age of wonders. Unlike the the primitive before times, we now have access to TikTok, broccoli haircuts, and Brazilian butt lifts. Best of all, crocs, which are allegedly futuristic but also stupid, are now available to our fur babies.

Fast Company reports that BarkBox, a company that will monthly send you a box of things that you don't need, is teaming up with the official Crocs brand to produce footwear for dogs. They're fairly sophisticated shoes because they're made to fit different sizes and shapes of dog feet. They're compatible with Jibbitz charms, so be sure to also order your dog's favorites starting on October 23, when these crocs go on sale.

Photo: Crocs


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