12 Most Mysterious Things That Science Still Cannot Explain

preview_player
Показать описание


We rely on scientists to do a lot for us. When great breakthroughs are made in the field of medicine, there will be a scientist behind it. When new forms of technology appear and make our everyday lives better or easier, a scientist has been involved somewhere in that process. Scientists don't know everything, though, and in some instances, that remains true no matter how much time they spend studying an object or phenomenon. With no disrespect intended to scientists, here's a whole video full of mysteries they can't help us with!

#Mysterious #Abandoned #Finds #EverSee #Compilation #LightningTop
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

The sliding rocks has been explained by scientists. They are moved by the wind when the ground is wet after rain.
The Tunguska event has been explained - a meteor that exploded before impact - a common event - though not this scale.
The raining fish has been explained by tornadoes over water which does not kill the fish.

brian_jackson
Автор

Reptiles do yawn. We used to have a Burmese Python about 8.5 feet long. She was coiled up in my lap one day and I needed something to drink. My plan of action was to slider her off my lap onto the couch si I could get up and get a drink. I was too slow. She lifted her head staring me face to face, and suddenly yawned in my face. It was at that exact moment I realized she had gotten large enough to get her way...

ReverenXero
Автор

Obviously the fish get sucked up by a water spout or something equivalent and dropped out of the clouds later

robertmcfall
Автор

the radio bursts are Known Pulsars, stars, and black holes they obviously cant find them all, but it is known how to tell them apart from other noise that they make in a very specific way.

griffmason
Автор

Reptiles and birds do yawn, mine do it every day.... they must be bored because of the lock down

sandraezesky
Автор

My cat enjoys sitting on the coffee table and looking at me till I return her gaze. Then she'll dramatically yawn. She will continue the eye contact with me till. . . I yawn. Then she gives this derisive look. Like, smh "weak willed human".

LambentLark
Автор

Twisted trees planted in sand is Extremely easy to explain tree's (plants) rhizome grow symmetrically literally every root tip is directly connected to some part of the growth, it's Not a collective as some assume
Lack of humics layers in the sand is causing uneven root growth resulting in the deformation

mrglasecki
Автор

Everything gets solved in a comments section.

simonhansen
Автор

The Real Reason the Humpback whales are forming groups is because they watched " Star Trek 4 the Voyage Home " .

" Captain there be whales here"

johnrettig
Автор

The Annunaki were known for making this happen. They showed great power by raining fish to a population of humans that were under famine times. This however seems possibly multidimensional in its appearance! What condition were the fish in when they feel? Were they alive? Dead? Spoiled? Fresh? To know the data would really give more fire to a possible hypothesis!

beauglenn
Автор

Yawning is a recalibration of the pressure in your sinuses..

_TROUBLE_
Автор

Don't apologise, I yawned 3 times in the first minute or 2 ! Felt good and I needed to !

markpowell
Автор

Gonna have to dig deeper on those signals that repeat every 16 days

robertmcfall
Автор

The movement of the stones on the dry lake bed are moving because of the changes in temperature during dusk, creating some condensation then later on in desert it's freezing cold which causes the moisture to freeze beneath the rocks and with a combination of this with windy conditions is enough to slowly move them across the lake without anyone seeing, I heard this years ago and I'm not sure why no one has placed cameras in the location and check them after a windy night occurs and if they're lucky they might see the movement on a time lapse replay, that's what I saw on a documentary but can't remember who did it, possibly David Attenborough?

philsam
Автор

In the late 1950s it used to rain snakes in Singapore. I remember it well because, knowing that they were poisonous, my elder brother used to try to get me to pick them up. (you can't choose your family as they say).
They were nicknamed "Bootlace snakes"
Sucked out of the sea by violent storms and then deposited some time later as they grew and became heavier.
Nice plot for a horror movie if you Don't like snakes!

NigelHeaton
Автор

About the stone traces on dry lake surface, the riddle has been solved recently. I think it is a scientific study, I'll try to find a link to it. I don't remember precisely. It has to do with winds IIRC. "IIRC": contrary to what you implied, it is not that wind pushes the stones directly, but the dust/sandy particles around it, and when enough dust has been removed, the stone advances a little in the mini tiny little new hole, and the task repeat again. I think the research made a parrallel between the direction of the rock tracks and wind corridor in those places. IIRC.

StphRolland
Автор

We get moon bows quite often in N.S.W Australia 🦘

eileenjoystar
Автор

Them tree bleeding so thing can get in side Termites flooded out instantly

bryanpage
Автор

Lanzarote vineyards looks like giant doodle bugs have been busy...

rairai
Автор

Once you recognize your existence you're able to yawn. For obvious reasons;)

al