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- #UNSOLVED PIRATE MYSTERIES CRACKED#
- #UNSOLVED PIRATE MYSTERIES MOVIE#
- #UNSOLVED PIRATE MYSTERIES CODE#
Besides the inscrutable French government formula for pricing funerals, Borgmann asks for help solving the mystery text Rembrandt etched into “Faust in His Study, Watching a Magic Disc” (about 1652, with prints held by the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Pierpont Morgan Library).
#UNSOLVED PIRATE MYSTERIES CRACKED#
See Also: Top 10 Secret Codes You Aren’t Meant To Know 10 Faust’s Magic Discĭmitri Borgmann, linguistics pioneer, successfully cracked many codes but left two “bafflers” in his authoritative work “Beyond Language”.
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Your rewards, described below, include buried treasures, rewrites of history, and even mystical insights into the universe. Now you can test your discovery skills against a fresh slate listing ten more of the most compelling unsolved codes and ciphers ever concealed, all of which have supernaturalist or globalist backstories. Listverse readers already know many still-unsolved mystery writings of the past, like the Voynich manuscript and the Phaestos disk, and treasure-hunt codes of the present, like the Kryptos cipher sculpture that was recently updated with the “Berlin clock” hint. Maybe the author is alive and deliberately withholding information, or maybe the key appears entirely lost to the past.
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#UNSOLVED PIRATE MYSTERIES CODE#
Mystery texts arise anytime an inventive author conceals the key to understanding some new method of writing, but mystery texts go viral whenever the code suggests the key is easy to recover. NASA, of course, continues to deny a moon-landing hoax, and Aldrin once punched a guy in the face for bringing up the conspiracy theory.Human desire to conceal is rivaled by our desire to reveal.
#UNSOLVED PIRATE MYSTERIES MOVIE#
There are many questions, from the source of mysterious shadows to why there's a rock labeled with a "C" (the same way props are labeled on movie sets) to how the American flag, placed on the moon by Armstrong and fellow Apollo 11 pilot Buzz Aldrin, seems to ripple in the breeze. The theory is that the whole thing was staged, filmed in a Hollywood studio by director Stanley Kubrick, who had wowed audiences a year earlier with his pretty realistic outer space epic 2001: A Space Odyssey. But there are many people who claim it was all an act, that we never landed on the moon, much less walked on it.
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We all take it for granted that when Neil Armstrong took his "giant leap for mankind" on July 20th 1969, he was actually walking on the lunar surface. (The light started appeared shortly after the crime, which is why this story continues to be a popular one.) Either way, the Gordon Light proves to be one of the enduring unsolved mysteries of the world. Or it may be the ghost of a railroad foreman, murdered by one of his employees with either a railroad spike or a hammer. One has it that a railroad worker was hit by a train and decapitated, and the light comes from a lantern as his ghost continues to walk the tracks, looking for his disembodied head. There's no rational explanation for the light, but there are legends. The Gurdon Light has appeared for hundreds of people, and some townspeople have seen it so many times that it's become an ordinary part of their life. It's not part of local legend because some kids saw it once and everybody had to take their word for it. Weird floating lights have been seen all over the country, but there's something different about the mysterious light floating near the railroad tracks in Gurdon, Arkansas. To this day, it's one of the most enduring unsolved mysteries of the world: Did she do it? Did Lizzie get away with murder? She was scorned in public, and became the subject of children's rhymes ("Lizzie Borden took an axe/ And gave her mother forty whacks/ When she saw what she had done/ She gave her father forty-one"). When Lizzie was acquitted, the town turned against her, treating her like a murderer who had somehow escaped justice. Prior to the murders, she was also upset with her parents, her stepmother in particular, for being especially frugal with their finances. (Sure did seem like somebody was hiding evidence.)
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The entire town assumed she was guilty, and indeed she wasn't her best ally, giving inconsistent answers to investigators and choosing an odd time (after the death of her parents) to suddenly start burning her old clothes. When a wealthy couple in Fall River, Massachusetts were butchered in their own home with an axe, in 1892, there was only one plausible suspect: Their 32-year-old daughter Lizzie, who lived with the couple.
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