#Dyatlov Pass 1959 - Wer kann dazu was erzählen oder weiß, wo der Autor #Weber heute steckt?
>Robert Weber über seine 9-teilige Hörspielserie "Das Djatlow-Massaker":
https://www.swr2.app/s/robert-weber-ueber-seine-9-teilige-hoerspielserie-das-djatlow-massaker-100
YT-Quelle: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=06GrK98jqGM&pp=ygUNZGphdGxvdyB3ZWJlcg%3D%3D
Today I spoke to @politiken about avalanches + then coincidentally @TimHarford 's delightful #CautionaryTales about #Dyatlov popped up
Episode webpage: https://omny.fm/shows/cautionary-tales-with-tim-harford/missing-on-dead-mountain-a-cold-war-cold-case
In the bleak Russian winter of 1959, nine experienced hikers led by Igor Dyatlov set out on an expedition. None of them made it back alive. When their campsite was finally discovered, it told a chilling story: their tent was slashed open, bodies scattered across the snow. The hikers' injuries were as baffling as they were gruesome. One had had his head stoved in. Bits of bone had been driven into his brain. Others were missing their eyes and their tongues. Had the hikers angered the local Mansi tribespeople? Had they witnessed a secret military experiment? Or had something even more strange and sinister unfolded on Dead Mountain? For a full list of sources, see the show notes at timharford.com.
February 1, 1959, nine Russian hikers set up a campsite for the night on the slopes of Kholat Saykhl in the Urals. Hours later they are all dead.
The #Dyatlov Pass mystery may finally be solved thanks to a computer simulation:
In February 1959, a group of nine hikers died in mysterious circumstances on the slopes of a then unnamed mountain in the Urals. A computer program used for realistic snow physics in movies suggests a freak avalanche is to blame.
January 28, 1959, after collecting samples of quartz & pyrite at an abandoned geological exploration site in the #Ural mountains, economy student Yuri Yudin heads home. He will be the only survivor of the #Dyatlov expedition...
In February 1959, a group of nine hikers died in mysterious circumstances on the slopes of a then unnamed mountain in the Urals. A computer program used for realistic snow physics in movies suggests a freak avalanche is to blame.
February 1, 1959, nine Russian hikers set up a campsite for the night on the slopes of Kholat Saykhl in the Urals 🏔
Hours later they are all dead.
The #Dyatlov Pass mystery may finally be solved thanks to a computer simulation.
In February 1959, a group of nine hikers died in mysterious circumstances on the slopes of a then unnamed mountain in the Urals. A computer program used for realistic snow physics in movies suggests a freak avalanche is to blame.
January 28, 1959, after collecting samples of quartz & pyrite at an abandoned geological exploration site in the #Ural mountains, economy student Yuri Yudin heads home. He will be the only survivor of the #Dyatlov expedition...
In February 1959, a group of nine hikers died in mysterious circumstances on the slopes of a then unnamed mountain in the Urals. A computer program used for realistic snow physics in movies suggests a freak avalanche is to blame.