Mysteries Without Answers: 45 More Bizarre Unsolved Cases – Part 3

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26Disappearance of John Brisker

Disappearance of John Brisker

John Brisker was an American basketball player who played in the ABA and NBA in the early 1970s. Brisker averaged over 20 points per game and was considered a solid defensive player too. Due to his volatile personality and penchant for fighting he was cut at the end of the 1975 season. In 1978 John Brisker, flew to Uganda to allegedly start an import/export business but was never heard from again. The prevailing theory is that he went there as a guest of Ugandan strongman Idi Amin. When Amin was overthrown in 1979, Brisker was allegedly executed by a firing squad.


27. British Library has at least three books/manuscripts that are written entirely in cipher. “The Subtlety of Witches,” authored by Ben Ezra Aseph, from 1657, “Order of the Altar, Ancient Mysteries to Which Females Were Alone Admissible: Being Part the First of the Secrets Preserved in the Association of Maiden Unity and Attachment,” from 1835 and “Mysteries of Vesta,” from 1850.


28. In 2018, during a New York Times interview with Glitterex, the interviewer asked Manager Lauren Dyer a simple question. She was asked if she could tell which industry served as Glitterex’s biggest market and her answer was instant: “No, I absolutely know that I can’t.” She knew which industry it was and said “you would never guess it.” She even added that if you looked at it you would never guess its glitter. She even declined to give an answer off record. Speculations on internet forums range from glitter being used by the U.S. Department of Defense, its use in stealth tech, to it being used in space applications, but the mystery remains which industry is the largest buyer of glitter in the USA.


29. Out of over 2000+ nuclear test detonations that have taken place on earth, only one has an unknown nationality. On September 22, 1979, the Vela satellite reported the characteristic double flash (a very fast and very bright flash, then a longer and less-bright one) of an atmospheric nuclear explosion of two to three kilotons, in the Indian Ocean between Bouvet Island (Norwegian dependency) and the Prince Edward Islands (South African dependencies). US Airforce planes flew into the area shortly but could find no signs of a detonation or radiation.


30. Over 2000 large Medieval-era man-made tunnels, known as “Erdstall”, have been discovered all across Europe, with the largest number being discovered in Germany and Austria. Nobody knows who made them or why. The tunnels are incredibly narrow (around 24 inches in width) and short (3’3” to 4’7” feet in height). A number of tunnels include a “slip” which is a point where the tunnel becomes even more narrow as it goes to a deeper level. Some of these tunnels are quite complex, with multiple layers like that of a modern subway system with different chambers and numerous offshoot tunnels. Some of them are adjacent to cemeteries, while others can be found in the middle of the woods. Most of these tunnels have absolutely nothing inside them. There is no evidence of tire tracks or human remains or waste from day to day life. Millstones and a plowshare have been found, but they are very uncommon. Charcoal has been found in a few tunnels, which has been dated to 950 to late 1100s. The diggers have left no recorded trace of why they made these.


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31Crew of Mary Celeste

Crew of Mary Celeste

Mary Celeste was an American brig with a crew of eight and two passengers, the master's wife and infant daughter, which embarked on her fatal voyage, from New York to Genoa, in the autumn of 1872. The master, Benjamin Briggs, was highly experienced and highly respected, a man of good character and strong religious beliefs. The ship was found adrift in the Atlantic Ocean a few days later, totally deserted, but in totally seaworthy conditions and with the crew’s belongings perfectly intact. The crew was never seen or heard from again.


32. English sweating sickness was a disease of unknown cause that appeared in England as an epidemic on five occasions - in 1485, 1508, 1517, 1528, and 1551. It was confined to England, except in 1528–29, when it spread to the European continent. The disease was very contagious. It caused profuse sweating and those that caught it often died within hours. After raging for more than 60 years, the last major outbreak of the disease in England was recorded in 1551. The disease claimed the lives of tens of thousands before mysteriously vanishing. Just as quickly as it came, it left the continent, and the exact cause behind it still remains unidentified by epidemiologists today.


33. In 1968, a fishing boat from the Canary Islands named Fausto was on its way back to port after picking up a father who was trying to visit his sick kid. They never arrived. A British ship ran into them 4 days later and hundreds of miles away from the islands. Its crew looked dehydrated but only asked for gas to get back home. British crew insisted on helping them back home, but they refused and said everything was fine. The crew’s families heard of this and expected to see them see soon but Fausto never arrived. Two months later, out in the middle of the Atlantic, an Italian boat found the Fausto drifting at sea. They found no one on board and the boat’s condition was fine, but they made a startling discovery - a naked, partially mummified corpse. Next to the body was a journal. Several of its pages were ripped out and but the last page read “Don't tell anyone what happened on this boat, God forgive us.” The Italian boat attempted to tow Fausto to South America but in the middle of the night, it started to sink and they had to cut the line.


34. In 1953, the United States Air Force pilot Felix Moncla was stationed at Kinross Air Force Base in Michigan when a mysterious airborne object appeared on ground radar. Lt. Moncla scrambled his F-89 Scorpion interceptor to investigate the anomaly, but as he grew nearer, the ground radar reported seeing his aircraft suddenly merge with the object. Both objects immediately vanished from radar vision. Theories centered on a collision with an unreported Canadian aircraft, but Canadian authorities denied any such aircraft being in the area. No confirmed debris or wreckage was discovered and it still remains a mystery what happened to Felix Moncla.


35. From about 1867-1871, there were reports of a strange noise reverberating through iron-hulled ships outside of Grey Town in Nicaragua. The noise did not affect wood-hulled ships, only those made of iron, and consisted of a loud, long, high-pitched, steady vibration. It was “musical” in its likeness, and its source could not be determined. One captain said that the sound had a distinct ¾ time signature like a waltz that turned his ship’s hull into a “great musical sounding board.” The source of the vibrations is still undetermined to this day, and no mention of anything similar around Grey Town has been reported since 1871.


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36Ghost Rockets

Ghost Rockets

Just after the end of World War 2 people in Sweden reported thousands of sightings of UFOs that were named Ghost Rockets. Witnesses reported seeing a blazing light leave a smoky trail in the air. The lights were seen to dive, roll, and perform other aerial acrobatics. They had long flaming tails, made little sound, and traveled at speeds in excess of 400+ mph. One Swedish Air Force pilot pursued it and reported to spot a torpedo-shaped object which had no aircraft features, but his bomber couldn’t keep up with it due to its high speed. US government took them seriously enough that President Dwight D. Eisenhower sent war hero Gen. Jimmy Doolittle to Sweden to investigate in 1946. It’s still a mystery what these actually were.


37. In 1967, an unknown large object splashed into the waters near Shag Harbor in Nova Scotia, Canada. The crash was investigated by various Canadian agencies, but no remains of any kind of craft was ever recovered. It remains one of the few incidents where a Government agency has formally declared that an unidentified flying object was involved.


38. “The Bloody Benders” were America’s first serial killer family. In the wake of the Civil War, many Americans headed west, away from the battlefields. If they happened through Kansas and stayed at the inn run by the Bender clan, they were killed. Travelers often carried with them every dime they had, and the Benders soon realized they could grow rich robbing their guests. The family is known to have at least 11 people between 1868 and 1872, luring each of them into their hotel in Cherryvale, Kansas. They disappeared before their crimes were discovered and were never seen again.


39. In 1622, the Spanish galleon Nuestra Senora de Atocha was heading back to Spain carrying a precious cargo of gold, silver, and gems that would be valued at around $700 million today. It was caught in a hurricane off the coast of Key West and perished. Most of its cargo has already been found. In 1985, a treasure hunter found $500 million worth of the buried treasure less than 100 miles off the coast of Key West. Experts believe there is still plenty of treasure to be found. According to its captain’s original manifest, there are still about 17 tons of silver bars, 128,000 coins of different values, 27 kilos of emeralds, and 35 boxes of gold to be found.


40. The Fort Worth Missing Trio refers to the disappearance of Rachel Trlica, Renee Wilson, and Julie Ann Moseley (9 years old) after they went Christmas shopping in 1974. They wanted to be home by 4 pm, but when the girls didn't come home, the families became concerned and traveled to the shopping center to search for them. Their car was still in the mall parking lot, with some purchased gifts in the car, indicating they had made it back to the car to drop them off. Rachel’s husband received a letter in the mail the day after they disappeared that said “I know I’m going to catch it, but we had to get away. We’re going to Houston. See you in about a week. The car is in Sears’ upper lot. Love Rachel.” When the letter was analyzed, the handwriting was deemed inconclusive. Rachel appeared to be misspelled and the letter was addressed to “Thomas,” and not “Tommy,” as Rachel called him, and the letter was written in pen, while the address was in pencil. All three girls have still not been found.


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41Mystery Kidney Disease

Mystery Kidney Disease

Beginning in the 1990s, a deadly epidemic began sweeping the Central American nations of Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala. Thousands of men working on sugarcane plantations suddenly began dropping dead of kidney failure. On further research, it was found that young farm laborers who were perfectly healthy just a few years before were turning up at clinics with end-stage kidney disease. They were not found to have diabetes or hypertension which might explain why their kidneys were failing. Though a lot of researchers agree that it's related to hard physical labor in intense tropical heat, the exact mechanism or underlying reason behind the sudden onset of Chronic Kidney Disease in such a young population still remains unsolved.


42. Albert Einstein proved through mathematics, the existence of black holes, which were later observed and confirmed to physically exist. Einstein also proved through his equations that white holes existed. White Hole is a hypothetical region of space-time that cannot be entered from the outside, although matter and light can escape from it. In this sense, it is the reverse of a black hole. Some believe Big Bang might have been produced by a supermassive white hole explosion. It is still a mystery if white holes can exist as none have been observed so far.


43. The London Stone is a landmark in London, which consists of a block of limestone, enclosed within the walls of a building, yet nobody knows its original purpose. It has been recorded in literature and maps since 1100 A.D. English folklore deems it to be necessary to London’s very survival. It’s been moved many times and survived disasters including the Great Fire and the Blitz.


44. Heinrich Müller, chief of the Gestapo, is the most senior Nazi unaccounted for. CIA files reveal an exhaustive search to find him in the months after the war. They were unable to track him after World War 2 because of his incredibly generic name (which translates to Henry Miller) and the fact that, unlike Heydrich and Himmler, he had remained anonymous to the public. The uncertainty of Müller's ultimate end and/or whereabouts has only served to nourish the “mysterious power” that the Gestapo elicits even to the present.


45. Drawn into a high plateau in Peru’s Nazca Desert, ancient designs (dating back to 500 B.C. to 500 A.D.) stretching more than 50 miles have astounded archaeologists for decades. Along with simple lines and geometric shapes, drawings of animals, birds, and humans have also been made, some measuring 600 feet across. The drawings can only be viewed and appreciated from way up in the air and there is no evidence that the Nazca people invented flying machines. Theories behind its usefulness range from them being used for an ancient form of flight to them pointing to an underground water source. Still, there isn’t any concrete consensus about the purpose of the lines.

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