:INFO The Dyatlov Pass Incident In the winter of 1959, nine experienced ski hikers from the Ural Polytechnic Institute died on a mountain pass in the northern Urals. They had cut their way out of their tent from the inside and fled into deep snow and temperatures near minus forty. What drove them out has been debated for over sixty years. :JOURNEY The Dyatlov case 2 Departure 2 One Leaves 3 Last Camp 5 The Flight 4 Found 4 Closed 3 Reopened :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:1959 Soviet inquest conclusion] The hikers died as a result of a compelling natural force which they were unable to overcome. :INFO What made it strange? Some of the dead had severe internal injuries with no external wounds. A few were found with very little clothing. Soviet investigators recorded high radiation on some garments and noted the tent had been cut open from the inside. These details fuelled theories for decades. :NOTE.half A 2021 study modelled a delayed slab avalanche on the slope. It could explain the chest and skull injuries seen on some of the hikers. :NOTE.half Other theories range from infrasound panic to a military test. No single explanation accounts for every detail in the file, which keeps the debate open. :POLL Avalanche or unexplained? Cast your vote. Slab avalanche, the science fits A military test gone wrong Infrasound panic on the slope Still genuinely unexplained :LINK https://www.google.com/search?q=Dyatlov+Pass+Incident+1959 Read more about the case