The Speed Wolf

Is Buxton haunted by the last wolf in England?

Picture Credit: The Paranormal Database

On a dark road just outside Buxton, a driver catches sight of movement ahead. For a moment it appears within the headlights. Large, dark. Wolf-like. Then it is gone. The creature crosses the road with astonishing speed before disappearing into the darkness beyond the beam. The witness slows down, glances into the mirrors and searches the roadside but can see nothing. The landscape remains silent. The animal has vanished.

Stories such as these have circulated around Buxton and the surrounding Peak District for years. Witnesses describe a huge canine shape moving through the darkness, crossing roads, pacing vehicles or appearing unexpectedly before disappearing just as quickly. Some call it a phantom. Others believe it to be an escaped animal, a trick of the light or simple misidentification. Locally, however, it has acquired a name.

The Speed Wolf.

At first glance the legend sounds like a modern cryptid story, the kind of tale born from fast roads, headlights and overactive imaginations. But what if the roots of the legend stretch much deeper? What if the Speed Wolf is not merely a modern mystery but the latest chapter in one of Derbyshire’s oldest stories?

To understand that possibility, we must leave the roads of modern Buxton behind and travel east to the village of Wormhill. Today Wormhill is a quiet Peak District settlement surrounded by fields and limestone uplands and, like many villages in the area, it possesses a history far older than most visitors realise.

For centuries Wormhill was associated with a very different reputation.

Wolves.

According to local tradition, the tenants of Wormhill once paid a curious form of tribute. Instead of money or produce, they were said to present wolf heads as part of their obligations. The details vary depending on the source, but the story survived for generations and became woven into local identity. But even more remarkable than that is another tradition. Wormhill claims a connection to the last wild wolf in England.

Several places across Britain make similar claims, and historians rightly approach such stories with caution. Wolves disappeared gradually rather than dramatically. There was no official ‘final wolf’. Different regions remember different animals, different dates. Yet the Wormhill story endures.

Local tradition holds that an exceptionally large wolf was hunted and killed near Wormhill Hall during the late medieval period. Some versions identify it as the last wolf in England. Others simply describe it as a particularly notorious beast that had terrorised livestock and local communities. The precise facts may never be known but the folklore survived nonetheless.

This is where things become interesting…

Now, most animals vanish from a landscape and are quickly forgotten. Wolves, however, did not. Across Europe they lingered in stories long after they disappeared from forests and hills. They became symbols of wilderness, danger and the untamed world that existed beyond the safety of settlements. People continued telling wolf stories even when nobody alive had ever seen one and the Peak District was no exception.

Generation after generation have inherited memories of wolves through folklore. The creatures remain present in the imagination in the form of shucks, barghests and werewolves long after they vanish from reality.

Perhaps that is the reason we discount them as folklore.

The witnesses who describe this particular beasty rarely report seeing an ordinary dog. They describe something larger. More powerful. More… wolf-like. This creature appears in precisely the same area in modern reports that wolves once occupied in medieval times.

But it appears unexpectedly. It vanishes mysteriously. It almost seems to belong to the margins of the landscape. Most importantly, it refuses to be fully explained.

Folklorists and investigators of paranormal phenomena often speak of landscape memory. Certain stories become attached to particular places and survive for centuries. Sometimes the original event is forgotten. Sometimes the facts become distorted. Yet the story itself persists. Could the Speed Wolf be part of exactly that process? Not a living wolf but some kind of ghost or memory. A fragment of folklore carried forward into the modern age.

Five hundred years ago a traveller crossing the Peak District might have reported a large wolf glimpsed at dusk. Three hundred years ago the story might have become a tale told beside the fire to keep people wandering alone in the dark. One hundred years ago it might have survived as local folklore. Today it appears in Facebook groups, conversations between friends and reports shared online. The medium changes but the story survives.

Of course, there are more mundane explanations.

The Peak District contains many wild animals . Deer can appear surprisingly wolf-like when glimpsed briefly. Darkness distorts perception. Fog transforms ordinary shapes into extraordinary ones. Motorists travelling at speed can misjudge size and distance in an instant. Every cryptid investigator knows these possibilities must be considered.

Yet dismissing the Speed Wolf entirely misses the point. Folklore is not valuable because every story is true. Folklore is valuable because it reveals what people believe, fear and remember. The story of the Speed Wolf tells us something important about the Peak District:

Despite roads, streetlights and smartphones, mystery remains. The moors still possess the power to surprise us. Ancient stories still find new ways to survive. And somewhere beneath this particular modern legend lies the shadow of a very old animal that once genuinely walked these hills.

The real wolves are gone. The memory remains. Perhaps that is why the legend refuses to die.

On a winter evening outside Buxton, a driver rounds a bend and catches sight of a large shape moving impossibly fast across the road ahead. By the time they react, it has vanished. Perhaps it was a dog, perhaps it was a deer. Perhaps it was merely a trick of the light.

Or perhaps the last wolf in England is still trying to find its way home to Wormhill.

#AncientLegends #BlackDogLegends #BritishCryptids #BritishWolves #Buxton #BuxtonFolklore #Cryptozoology #DerbyshireFolklore #DerbyshireMysteries #EnglishFolklore #folkHorror #FolkloreAndMythology #ForteanBritain #ghostWolf #GhostWolves #HauntedPeakDistrict #HauntedRoads #highStrangeness #LandscapeFolklore #LastWolfInEngland #localLegends #LostWolvesOfBritain #mysteriousCreatures #ParanormalDerbyshire #PeakDistrict #PeakDistrictFolklore #PeakDistrictHistory #PeakDistrictLegends #PhantomAnimals #PhantomBeasts #phantomWolf #RoadGhosts #ruralLegends #SpeedWolf #strangeBritain #WolfFolklore #wolfLegend #Wormhill #WormhillHistory

M T News Round-Up – Week Ending 5 June 2026

As spring edges towards summer, the worlds of UFOs, cryptozoology, crop circles and the paranormal continue to provide enough mystery to keep even the most hardened sceptic peering over their shoulder.

This week has been particularly busy on the disclosure front, while Britain’s annual crop circle season is already producing intriguing formations across the south-west of England.

In the world of UFO disclosure, the biggest story remains the ongoing release of previously classified American government files. A second batch of declassified UAP documents was released by the US Department of Defense on 22 May and continues to be analysed by researchers. The files reportedly contain accounts of green orbs, discs and fireballs observed by military personnel and civilians. While no evidence of extraterrestrial visitation has been confirmed, the continuing release of records marks one of the most significant disclosure efforts in decades. ([Reuters][1])

The disclosure debate was further fuelled by renewed political pressure in Washington. Lawmakers, whistleblowers and UFO investigators have again called for greater transparency from federal agencies regarding unidentified aerial phenomena. Public hearings and document releases continue to keep the issue firmly in the headlines. ([The Washington Times][2])

Adding further intrigue, former Pentagon UAP investigator Jay Stratton announced a forthcoming memoir claiming to reveal details of alleged government knowledge concerning non-human intelligence. While such claims remain controversial and unverified, the announcement has generated considerable discussion within the UFO community. ([EW.com][3])

Meanwhile, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman commented on recently released files, stating that some military sensor recordings remain unexplained, although he stressed that no evidence of alien bodies or extraterrestrial craft has been found. ([Fox News][4])

Closer to home, Britain’s mystery big cats continue to stalk both countryside and imagination. Reports from researchers monitoring sightings suggest that witness accounts remain steady throughout 2026. While no definitive proof of breeding populations has emerged, sightings continue to be logged across Wales, Dorset, Suffolk and the Scottish Highlands. Investigators remain particularly interested in recurring reports of large black felines observed by experienced countryside users. ([The blog of author Luke Phillips][5])

As always, the debate remains lively. Sceptics point to misidentification, escaped pets and exaggeration. Believers note the sheer volume of reports stretching back decades, along with occasional physical traces such as hairs and tracks. The truth, as ever, remains elusive. ([The Webinar Vet][6])

The 2026 crop circle season is already shaping up to be one of the busiest in recent years. Researchers recorded an early-season formation near Ilchester in Somerset during April, followed by formations at Waden Hill, Jack’s Castle Plantation near Alfred’s Tower, Kingweston and most recently White Sheet Hill in Wiltshire. ([Temporary Temples][7])

Particularly notable was the approximately 75-metre formation reported at White Sheet Hill on 22 May. Drone footage and field surveys have attracted considerable attention among enthusiasts, with many noting the increasing complexity of designs appearing so early in the season. Whether viewed as elaborate human artworks, social experiments, or something stranger, the formations continue to draw visitors from around the world. ([cropcircleaccess.com][8])

Paranormal investigators have also been discussing a growing number of reports concerning unusual atmospheric phenomena associated with alleged hauntings. While no single case has dominated headlines this week, ghost hunting groups across Britain and North America continue to report increased public interest as summer investigation season gets underway. Several historic locations are already announcing sold-out investigation events and overnight vigils. ([Instagram][9])

Perhaps the most enduring mystery remains not any individual sighting or piece of evidence, but the persistence of the phenomena themselves. Crop circles return each year. Big cats continue to be glimpsed on lonely hillsides. Strange lights still appear in the sky. Governments release files while simultaneously insisting they have found nothing extraordinary.

For believers, these are signs that something genuinely anomalous lies beneath the surface. For sceptics, they are examples of folklore evolving in real time. Either way, they ensure that the world remains a little more mysterious than we often imagine.

As always, if you have witnessed anything unusual, whether a strange light, an unexpected animal, a crop formation, or something that refuses to fit comfortably into ordinary explanations, Mysterious Times would love to hear from you.

Further Reading

Reuters: US releases second batch of declassified UFO files. ([Reuters][1])

Al Jazeera: Pentagon releases first tranche of UFO files. ([Al Jazeera][10])

Entertainment Weekly: Jay Stratton memoir announcement. ([EW.com][3])

Temporary Temples Crop Circle Reports 2026. ([Temporary Temples][11])

Crop Circle Access Latest Formations. ([cropcircleaccess.com][8])

British Big Cat Research Updates. ([The blog of author Luke Phillips][5])

[1]: https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-releases-second-batch-government-declassified-ufo-files-2026-05-22/ “US releases second batch of government declassified UFO …”

[2]: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/may/29/lawmakers-host-whistleblowers-ufo-investigators-press-feds-come-clean Lawmakers host whistleblowers, UFO investigators to press feds to come clean about space aliens”

[3] https://ew.com/former-intel-officer-jay-stratton-reveal-truth-non-human-intelligent-life-memoir-11989741 “Former senior U.S. official Jay Stratton to reveal ‘the truth about non-human intelligent life’ in bombshell memoir (exclusive)”

[4]: https://www.foxnews.com/politics/nasa-chief-pulls-back-curtain-trump-ufo-files-after-bizarre-finds-surface-buried-fed-records”NASA chief pulls back curtain on Trump UFO files after bizarre finds surface in buried fed records”

[5]: https://blackbeastsandboogeymen.com/2026/03/11/unseen-shadows-uk-big-cat-sightings-spring-2026-update/?utm_source=chatgpt.com “Unseen Shadows: UK Big Cat Sightings – Spring 2026 Update”

[6]: https://thewebinarvet.com/blog/british-big-cats-truth “The British Big Cats: Is The Truth Out There?”

[7]: https://temporarytemples.co.uk/crop-circles/2026-crop-circles “2026 Crop Circles”

[8]: https://www.cropcircleaccess.com/latestcropcircles “Latestcropcircles -“

[9]: https://www.instagram.com/p/DY8aldWRyrn “Time is running out to get signed up for America’s Original …”

[10]: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/8/make-up-their-own-minds-pentagon-releases-first-tranche-of-ufo-files “‘Make up their own minds’: Pentagon releases first tranche of UFO files”

[11]: https://temporarytemples.co.uk/project/crop-circles-2026-season-info “Crop Circles 2026 | Season Overview Info”

Copyright © 2026 Mysterious Times. All rights reserved. Sources remain the property of their respective copyright holders and are referenced here for reporting and research purposes.

#2026NewsRoundup #ABCs #AlienBigCats #AlienLife #AnomalousEncounters #AnomalousEvents #BlackPantherSightings #BritishBigCats #BritishMysteries #conspiracy #CropCircleSeason2026 #cropCircles #CryptidReports #Cryptozoology #disclosure #extraterrestrialIntelligence #Folklore #ForteanNews #ForteanResearch #ForteanRoundup #ForteanTimes #Forteana #Ghosts #GovernmentDisclosure #hauntedLocations #HiddenHistory #highStrangeness #HighWeirdness #ModernFolklore #MysteriousBritain #MysteriousTimes #mystery #MysteryAnimals #paranormalInvestigation #ParanormalNews #ParanormalRoundup #PentagonUFOFiles #SkyMysteries #strangeBritain #strangeSightings #SummerOfStrange #supernatural #TemporaryTemples #theUnknown #UAP #UFO #UFONews #UFORoundup #UnexplainedBritain #unexplainedPhenomena #UnsolvedMysteries #weeklyWeirdNews #WeirdBritain #WeirdWorldNews #Whistleblowers #WhiteSheetHill #WiltshireCropCircles

Mysterious Times Weekly Roundup W/E 20/05/26

The strange skies have been busy again this week. Between freshly released Pentagon UFO files, reports of mysterious underwater objects off the American coastline, and another surge in crop circle chatter across Britain, the week ending 20 May 2026 has offered plenty of fuel for late night conversations around the campfire.

As always in the world of the unexplained, some stories sit closer to documented fact while others drift into the realms of speculation and folklore. Either way, the boundary between mystery and modern news continues to blur in fascinating ways.

The biggest talking point this week has undoubtedly been the continuing release of declassified American UAP files through the newly launched PURSUE archive. The release, which began on 8 May, includes military footage, FBI files, NASA mission records and historical reports stretching back to the 1940s. Several outlets highlighted photographs connected to the Apollo missions, including strange lights captured during Apollo 17.

Officials stressed that the files do not confirm extraterrestrial life, though many incidents remain officially “unresolved”. ([Sky News][1])

Some of the more intriguing cases include reports of glowing objects making impossible turns over Kazakhstan, military infrared footage from the Middle East, and witness testimony involving luminous spheres over American military facilities. Researchers and sceptics alike have been combing through the material all week, arguing over whether the release represents genuine transparency or simply another carefully controlled data dump. ([Phys.org][2])

Meanwhile, attention has also turned beneath the waves. Reports circulating this week claimed that more than 9,000 unidentified submersible object sightings have been logged near United States coastlines since late 2025.

The reports, compiled through the Enigma sightings database, include accounts of fast moving objects entering and exiting the water, glowing shapes beneath the ocean surface, and apparent “transmedium” craft capable of moving between sea and sky. Retired military officials quoted in the reports expressed concern that at least some of the phenomena may represent unknown technology operating in restricted waters. ([New York Post][3])

Back here in Britain, crop circle season is beginning to stir once more. UFO and anomaly tracking websites have reported an uptick in discussions surrounding unusual formations and strange aerial sightings across southern England.

While no major verified formations have yet dominated headlines, enthusiasts are already watching Wiltshire and Hampshire closely as warmer weather and clearer night skies return. ([Aliens Digest][4])

Elsewhere in the world of oddity and high strangeness, lunar lore unexpectedly entered academic discussion this week through a paper examining Indigenous spiritual objections to commercial activity on the Moon.

While not paranormal in the traditional sense, the debate touches upon something deeply familiar within folklore studies: the idea that celestial bodies are not merely rocks in space, but sacred entities bound to myth, memory and identity. The paper references objections from Native American communities to the scattering of human remains on the Moon and questions how future lunar exploitation may collide with ancient beliefs. ([arXiv][5])

Online UFO communities have also been buzzing over fresh witness submissions involving jellyfish-like aerial anomalies, luminous domes and strange patterned lights appearing in American skies.

As ever, eyewitness testimony remains deeply subjective, but the sheer volume of reports continues to fascinate researchers who track patterns in modern folklore and anomalous experience. ([UFO Stalker][6])

Whether these stories ultimately prove to be misunderstood technology, psychological projection, elaborate hoaxes or something genuinely unknown, they continue to reveal an enduring truth about humanity.

We are still looking upward.

We are still searching dark waters and lonely fields for signs and symbols.

And perhaps most telling of all, we are still telling stories about the things we cannot quite explain.

Further reading and sources:

• [Sky News coverage of the Pentagon UFO files](https://news.sky.com/story/never-before-seen-files-on-ufos-released-by-pentagon-13541565)

• [ABC News report on the UAP archive release](https://abcnews.com/Politics/pentagon-begins-release-decades-unresolved-ufo-files/story?id=132780534)

• [EarthSky analysis of the newly released UAP records](https://earthsky.org/human-world/pentagon-ufo-files-uap-views-from-moon-nasa/)

• [New York Post report on underwater UFO sightings](https://nypost.com/2026/05/14/us-news/ufo-tracker-app-spots-thousands-of-mysterious-underwater-objects-off-us-shores/)

• [UFO Files Watch archive tracker](https://ufofileswatch.com/)

• [UFO Stalker sightings database](https://ufostalker.com/)

[1]: https://news.sky.com/story/never-before-seen-files-on-ufos-released-by-pentagon-13541565 “‘Never-before-seen’ files on UFOs released by Pentagon | US News | Sky News”

[2]: https://phys.org/news/2026-05-flying-discs-orbs-newly-pentagon.html”From flying discs to glowing orbs, these newly opened Pentagon files point somewhere stranger than expected”

[3]: https://nypost.com/2026/05/14/us-news/ufo-tracker-app-spots-thousands-of-mysterious-underwater-objects-off-us-shores/ “Thousands of mysterious underwater UFOs spotted off US shores: report”

[4]: https://aliensdigest.com/ “Aliens Digest – Latest UFO Sightings & UAP Disclosure News”

[5]: https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.17706 “‘Unacceptable to our people’: Diverse cultural beliefs, Indigenous rights, and the future of human activities on the Moon”

[6]: https://ufostalker.com/ “UFO Stalker | Real-Time UFO Sightings Map | Latest Reports, Photos, and Videos”

Copyright © 2026 Mysterious Times / Kirst Mason D’Raven. All rights reserved.

This article and images may not be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form without prior written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations used for review, commentary or scholarly purposes.

#alienEncounters #alienSightings #anomalousPhenomena #bizarreWorldNews #BritishCropCircles #conspiracyTheories #cropCircles #cryptoMysteries #Cryptozoology #declassifiedUFODocuments #extraterrestrialLife #Folklore #ForteanNews #fringeScience #hauntedHeadlines #highStrangeness #ModernFolklore #MysteriousLights #MysteriousTimes #mysteryNews #oddNews #paranormalInvestigation #ParanormalNews #PentagonUFOFiles #skyAnomalies #strangeSightings #supernaturalNews #UAP #UFO #UFODisclosure #uncannyEvents #underwaterUFOs #unexplainedEvents #unexplainedPhenomena #USOSightings #weeklyWeirdNews #weirdNews

Mysterious Times Weekly Roundup W/E 12-5-26

Just when you think the world has settled down for a quiet week, along comes another pile of glowing orbs, declassified UFO papers, strange creatures in distant waters and enough odd headlines to keep Forteans happily staring into the night sky with a mug of tea in hand.

The week ending 13th May 2026 has been especially busy for paranormal watchers, UFO researchers and cryptozoology enthusiasts alike, with one story in particular dominating discussion across social media, news outlets and late night conspiracy forums.

The biggest talking point of the week has undoubtedly been the release of previously classified Pentagon UFO files. The United States Department of Defense began publishing what it describes as “never before seen” material relating to unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAPs, on a rolling basis through a newly launched public archive.

The initial batch reportedly includes more than 150 documents, images and videos collected from agencies including NASA, the FBI and military intelligence departments. Among the files are astronaut reports, infrared footage of unexplained airborne objects and historical witness statements dating back decades.

Unsurprisingly, the internet reacted immediately. Believers hailed the release as historic disclosure while sceptics argued much of the material appears inconclusive or already partially known. Either way, it has reignited public fascination with UFOs in a major way. [1]

Several analysts and scientists interviewed after the release urged caution.

Experts noted that many of the images remain blurry, lack contextual data or could potentially be explained by balloons, optical artefacts or atmospheric effects. Others pointed out that eyewitness testimony alone is notoriously unreliable. Even so, the sheer scale of the disclosure has created a fresh wave of speculation, especially surrounding military encounters over oceans and restricted airspace. The Pentagon has stated that further document drops are expected in the coming weeks. [2]

Meanwhile, UFO sighting databases and reporting hubs have continued receiving a steady stream of new reports from around the world. This week alone included reports of silver spheres over Nevada, glowing orange orbs in remote desert areas and fast moving triangular formations seen above parts of Europe and the United States. One particularly intriguing case involved witnesses in Arizona describing two silent lights manoeuvring at impossible speeds without visible propulsion. Another report from Italy described a glowing sphere abruptly changing direction before vanishing. While none of these sightings have been independently verified, they continue to fuel public fascination with unexplained aerial phenomena. [3]

Over in the world of conspiracy culture, online discussions have exploded around claims involving missing or deceased scientists allegedly connected to classified aerospace or advanced energy projects. The theory, which has spread rapidly across social media platforms, suggests there may be hidden links between a number of unrelated disappearances and alleged UFO research programmes. Journalists, sociologists and investigators have strongly criticised these claims, describing the supposed connections as coincidence and pattern seeking rather than evidence of any organised conspiracy. Nonetheless, the theory has become one of the most widely discussed paranormal talking points of the month. [4]

Cryptozoology has had its own peculiar week as well. Reports from Australian waters involving unusually large squid sightings continue to circulate following several marine encounters shared online by divers and fishermen.

In Britain, the seemingly eternal mystery of phantom big cats remains active, with new alleged sightings reported in rural Wales and the north of England. Though photographs remain frustratingly unclear, witnesses continue describing large black feline shapes moving silently through woodland and farmland.

Nessie, naturally, has also resurfaced in discussion after fresh sonar anomalies from Loch Ness enthusiasts made the rounds online once again. No convincing evidence has emerged, but the legend clearly refuses to fade.

On the archaeological side of strange history, renewed interest has been sparked by reports concerning ancient Mesopotamian clay cylinders linked to King Nebuchadnezzar II. Researchers believe the inscriptions may represent some of the earliest surviving foundation texts associated with the rebuilding of the ziggurat of Kish. While not paranormal in itself, discoveries like these often blur the line between mythology, ancient religion and historical reality, particularly for those fascinated by lost civilisations and forgotten beliefs. [5]

Elsewhere in the world of Forteana, weather watchers in Wales shared photographs of bizarre lenticular cloud formations nicknamed “UFO clouds” after they appeared hovering motionless above hillsides earlier this month. Though meteorologists quickly explained the phenomenon as unusual but natural atmospheric conditions, the images spread rapidly online and inevitably revived memories of classic flying saucer imagery. [5]

The latest issue of Fortean Times has also been attracting attention this week with its deep dive into the historical origins of crashed UFO folklore, exploring mysterious airship scares, strange metals and tales of dead alien pilots from the nineteenth century. It serves as a timely reminder that many supposedly modern mysteries often have roots stretching far deeper into history than we sometimes realise. [6]

As always, the truth behind many of these stories remains frustratingly elusive. Some will eventually find mundane explanations. Others may remain permanently unresolved, drifting into folklore and becoming part of the strange modern mythology we continue building around ourselves.

And perhaps that uncertainty is part of the appeal. The unexplained continues to thrive precisely because it leaves room for imagination, speculation and wonder.

Further reading and sources:

Sky News UFO files report (https://news.sky.com/story/a-13541565)

ABC News Pentagon UFO release coverage(https://abcnews.com/Politics/pentagon-begins-release-decades-unresolved-ufo-files/story?id=132780534)

Spectrum News UAP archive article(https://spectrumlocalnews.com/us/snplus/news/2026/05/08/pentagon-ufos-unidentified-flying-objects-uap-new-website-tranches-additional-records)

Anomaly Daily sightings database(https://anomalydaily.com)

Aliens Digest sightings archive (https://aliensdigest.com)

Fortean Times magazine (https://www.forteantimes.com)

[1]: https://news.sky.com/story/a-13541565 “‘Never-before-seen’ files on UFOs released by Pentagon | US News | Sky News”

[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_files_release_%282026%29 “UFO files release (2026)”

[3]: https://anomalydaily.com “Anomaly Daily — A field guide to the unexplained”

[4]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missing_scientists_conspiracy_theory “Missing scientists conspiracy theory”

[5]: https://www.milkywaynews.com “Milky Way News”

[6]: https://www.zinio.com/publications/fortean-times/3154/issues/735151 “Issue 470 May 2026 – Fortean Times”

Copyright © 2026 Kirst Mason D’Raven / [Mysterious Times](https://www.mysterioustimes.co.uk). All rights reserved. This article or images may not be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form without prior written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations used in reviews, research or scholarly discussion with appropriate credit.

#AlienDisclosure #AlienLife #Aliens #AncientCivilisations #AncientMysteries #Anomalies #BigCats #Bitcoin #BritishFolklore #ConspiracyTheory #Cryptid #CryptidSightings #CryptoNews #Cryptozoology #DarkSkies #FlyingSaucers #Folklore #Fortean #Forteana #ForteanTimes #Ghosts #HighStrangeness #LochNessMonster #MysteriesOfTheWorld #MysteriousTimes #Mystery #Nessie #OddNews #ParanormalActivity #ParanormalInvestigation #ParanormalMagazine #ParanormalNews #ParanormalRoundup #PentagonUFOFiles #QuestionEverything #StayCurious #StrangeWorld #Supernatural #UAP #UFO #UFOCommunity #UFOCommunityUK #UFOFiles #UFONews #Unexplained #WeeklyRoundup #WeirdAndWonderful #WeirdBritain #WeirdNews
Paranormal Vortex Areas

It’s a common claim by paranormalists that there are special places on earth where “energy” whirls are responsible for strange phenomena reported at those locations. They are called paranormal or energy “vortex” areas. The crystallization of the “vortex” idea in this context began with a popular proponent of mysterious subjects who identified twelve equidistant areas around the globe with peculiar characteristics. Since then, the idea of a paranormal vortex has evolved. The term became flexible enough to be employed as the cause of localized anomalies, to “explain” areas of unusual natural or historical features, and to label places heavily laden with reports of “high strangeness”.

If you look up the word “vortex” in the metaphysical context (that is, not the actual scientific definition based on fluid dynamics), you will find it used in association with places like Sedona, Arizona, and areas where there is a concentration of reports of paranormal phenomena. These vortices (or vortexes) can be considered good or bad but the premise is that the vortex area is unusual in some way – it is a location of exceptional “energy” drawn from the earth. Some writers will go so far as to say these are areas where “known laws of physics don’t apply” or where the connection to the spirit world or other dimensions can be accessed. 

In a scientific framework, such areas of unusual energy could be measured and documented. But it is not so at these energy vortex locations. The effect is measured only in subjective human feelings or interpretation of observations, making the case for paranormal vortex areas entirely unscientific. The upwards or downwards swirling “energy” can be felt or used as a convenient ploy to explain areas of transcendence or high strangeness.

Ivan T. Sanderson’s Vile Vortices

The origin of paranormal vortex areas was not exactly scientific, but it was made to appear so. It was fortuitous and coincidental and then fitted to look precise. In 1968, Ivan T. Sanderson, a popular and influential writer about mysterious phenomena proposed the idea that there were 12 tilted oval areas located equidistantly around the globe  – ten of which were along defined latitudes north and south of the equator and an additional two at the poles. The locations corresponded to points of the earth’s surface on a grid. The vortex areas were located on the vertices of an icosahedron (a 20-faced polyhedron). Therefore, we find a tie-in with the concept of sacred geometry of the earth – a mathematical means of showing design in the earth’s features. (That’s a tangent to be examined at another time.)  

Originally labeled as areas of collected anomalies, Sanderson called these twelve spots “Vile Vortices”. The impetus for the mapping of these areas, according to Sanderson, was his research into what he believed were unexplained plane and ship disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle in the Atlantic and the “Devil’s Sea” area in the Pacific. Both areas fell along the 36 deg north latitude.

Vile vortex speculative locations

Sanderson seemed to have some help in further examination of these latitudes that resulted in identifying other sites where “funny things happen”. The oval shapes or “lozenges” trended southwest-northeast at exactly 72 degrees apart latitudinally (5 steps of 72 degrees = 360). That seemed like a pretty spooky fit! With the help of other researchers who did things like stick skewers through a model globe, Sanderson, et al. identified a band in the southern hemisphere at 36 degrees south latitude where notable locations also appeared 72 degrees apart, but on a 23.5-degree latitude shift. These other areas in the Southern Hemisphere included Easter Islands and the South Atlantic Anomaly.

Sanderson played up his evidence in a television appearance and in articles and books, continuing to update the idea for several years. The vile vortices concept was connected to dangerous, perplexing powers of the earth that manifested in precise locations.

Critical problems surfaced immediately with Sanderson’s idea. Firstly, the locations on the mathematically tidy map didn’t line up with the perceived anomalies that supposedly defined them. The locations of these vile vortices eventually meandered and became less exact. Later, some paranormalists asserted that the perimeters of the spooky areas would wax and wane, and maybe even wander, under the influence of ambiguous forces. Secondly, with only moderate effort, one can discover that there is nothing particularly unusual about these places and that the mysteries were enhanced or outright manufactured. 

Sanderson even admitted that the effect in the Bermuda Triangle, his key vortex feature, was “weak” because many planes and ships pass through daily without incident. Fishing boats in both the Bermuda and Dragon’s Triangle – the dramatic name for the Devil’s Sea area off the coast of Japan – certainly experienced occasional and unsurprising trouble due to mechanical failure, waves, and storms, just like sea-going vessels everywhere, but those mundane causes were downplayed or ignored.

Any weirdness that was rumored to be caused by vile vortex energy in the mid to late 20th century dissolved when more rational investigation and statistics were applied. Notably, the mysterious hazards supposedly apparent around the devil’s triangles of the Atlantic and Pacific were never acknowledged by the officials from either the US or Japan.

Grid of proposed vortex areas

Ley lines

Related, but somewhat separate from an earth grid is the idea of lines of energy lines called “leys”. (See Leylines: From the Old Straight Track to the Ghostbuster Vortex for a background on leys.) If one accepts that leys exist and that mysterious earth energy flows through them, it seems reasonable to subsequently conclude that where ley lines intersected (a “node”), some “funny things” might happen. The energy could, supposedly, amplify and swirl into a vortex. Following the maxims of pop cultural exchange, it’s unsurprising that paranormalists would find the mysterious energy vortices interesting. Leys became associated with providing energy for paranormal manifestation of all kinds – ghosts, sacred areas, healing places, UFO highways, etc. Because leys weren’t limited to certain nexus points on a grid, they could be “discovered” everywhere. And wherever these lines crossed, that area might be deemed a vortex. 

Sounds Sciencey

Describing the cause of strange phenomena as an energy vortex sounded very “sciencey”. Terms like magnetism and electromagnetic energy were used to define the forces. The term “energy” is widely misused by paranormalists because it sounds impressive. Vortex areas are said to “hold more energy” or have an “upward flow of energy”. With the exception of areas of natural geomagnetic or gravity anomalies that could be readily explained, vortex proponents downplayed the fact that there were no documented anomalous measurements in vortex areas. The lack of evidence and measurements undermined the acceptance of vile vortices from the start. This supposedly dangerous force affecting planes, boats, and the atmosphere has only been quantified by speculative and subjective means. 

When it became obvious that physical energy (in the form of measurable flowing electrons) wasn’t noticeably different in these areas, vortex claimants pivoted to calling the effect “spiritual” or psychic “energy” – a term for something that is not scientifically defined or measurable. That makes definitively documenting vortices conveniently impossible.

According to a website called “Vortex Hunters”, a vortex will cause normal devices to not register correctly:

“Traditional test equipment devices can be ineffective in sensing the unknown energies claimed to be present at some vortexes. Often, the best evidence of a vortex is how people feel when they are in one.”

VortexHunters.com

A critical component of scientific investigation is to minimize personal bias and subjectivity. How one “feels” is the least reliable method of measurement. The admission that vortices cannot be objectively detected is a giveaway that they are more imaginary than real. 

Continuing on this theme of detectably-undetectable energy, you can discover magical vortex areas by using magical tools like pendulums or dowsing rods. Or, as some vortex hunters claim, a person will sense tingling or an electrical feeling when in a vortex area. The vortex energy, some dauntless paranormalists state, may open a portal to another dimension. The portal conveniently allows spirits, aliens, or unusual creatures to appear and disappear without a trace. 

A few self-proclaimed “vortex scientists” describe some huge energy vortexes hundreds of miles across and part of a larger Fibonacci spiral thousands of miles across connecting important features. This is similar to ley lines but in circular and “quantum” terms. Appealing to quantum physics is a common and practical way of sounding sciencey to a non-scientist audience because the jargon sounds impressive but is nonsense. Quantum energy has nothing to do with the way people feel at vortex locations. The construction of complex, speculative concepts to explain mystery areas is effective in making the public believe that something extraordinary and real is occurring at that place. A critical evaluation of vortex areas reveals that they are designated based on pattern-seeking. If a location was famous for its strangeness, it can be labeled by someone as a vortex just by declaring it to be so. Eventually, many areas worldwide were called vortices as the use of term “vortex” expanded.

It’s in the rock

Many places around the world that are noted to be “energy vortexes” are also striking geological features (Sedona, Ibiza, Mt. Shasta, Haleakala, Uluru) or man-made stone structures (Stonehenge, Machu Picchu, Glastonbury Tor, Pyramid of Giza). So, vortex promoters say there is something about the rock.

Citing the bedrock composition as a key to vortex energy sounds legitimate and scientific. It’s not difficult to find many ghost hunters or UFO seekers citing the presence of limestone or quartz (and sometimes iron or gold) in the underlying rock as the catalyst that amplifies the earth’s energy to power paranormal activity. Their vague reasoning asserts that limestone or quartz more effectively channels or concentrates the energy. This may sound technical, but it’s science fiction to geologists. Limestone and quartz-containing bedrock (commonly, sandstone or granite) are ubiquitous in the crust and have been widely evaluated for their physical properties for all sorts of uses. There is nothing inherent in these rock types linked to the generation or focusing of physical or mystical energy. (Concepts of piezoelectricity, telluric currents, or conductivity are regularly abused for this purpose.) Tellingly, most paranormalists who proclaim this bedrock connection never check their local geological map. Sometimes neither limestone nor quartz is present. (To wit: shale and basalt are also ubiquitous.)

Another geological claim is that magnetic or gravitational anomalies in the crust fuel the energy vortex. There are maps of such anomalies around the globe. Magnetic anomalies are local variations in the earth’s magnetic field on the surface caused by differences in chemistry and magnetism of materials under the surface. Gravity anomalies are differences between the locally observed and the theoretically calculated value of gravity that reflects local variations in the density of the underlying rocks. These features are dictated by geological structure. For example, anomalies will appear in areas where the bedrock deviates from average density or composition because of ore bodies, or tectonic features. It’s just not mysterious. Such anomalies do not cause a human physiological response, regardless of the claims. This is well-established; to claim otherwise is delusory.

Popular paranormal vortices

Let’s take a look at a few common locations said to be paranormal vortices. These include so-called “mystery spots”, a few other designated triangular areas, and zones of “high strangeness” where all kinds of weird observations are reported.

Oregon Vortex: The location of the House of Mystery in Gold Hill, Oregon. Opened to the public as a tourist attraction in 1930, the location is advertised as an area of unique phenomena where “everyday physical facts are reversed” because of a spherical force field. It was the nation’s first “mystery spot” roadside attraction typically consisting of crooked buildings that create optical illusions against the landscape. Though there are self-published research findings for the Oregon Vortex, none of it is solid and the work is considered to be pseudoscience.

House of Mystery at the Oregon Vortex

Santa Cruz Mystery spot: A tourist attraction near Santa Cruz, California since 1939 featuring a tilted house enhanced by sloped land. The original owner was inspired by the Oregon Vortex attraction. The site has accumulated legends and exaggerated stories about the disconcerting effects. Many other similar tourist spots like this have been built around the country after the initial mystery spots gained attention from traveling families. While it is true that the site can be disorienting, the cause is not paranormal energy.

Sedona, AZ: Likely the most famous area of “energy vortexes” in the world. Several “positive” vortex areas are said to exist around Sedona that supposedly promote a sense of well-being, healing, high emotion, spiritual awareness, feeling of connection to the universe, and sometimes even visions. The energy is also said to manifest in signs such as twisted trees and light anomalies. The town is blessed with amazing climate and incredible erosional features carved into the red rock formations. The Oak Creek Canyon leading to Sedona is one of the few stream valleys in Arizona that flows all year. The location always served as a draw for artists, retirees and people seeking quiet and natural scenic beauty. The focus on spirituality began in the 1940s. By the 1960s, new age religious leaders were capitalizing on the location, seeking special cosmic energy there. The first use of the term “vortex” in reference to Sedona may have been around 1980. Sedona as a “vortex energy center” culminated in 1987 when thousands came for the harmonic convergence of the planets. Since then, the town jumped onboard the “vortex” theme. Several commercial ventures, from stores, resorts, and guided tours capitalize on exposing tourists to the vortex locations. There is no doubt that there is something “special” about this place – it’s jaw-droppingly gorgeous. It feels sacred and magical for very non-paranormal reasons. As with other vortex areas, there is no unique “energy” measurement that can be demonstrated here. Any unusual observation, however, is gleefully claimed to be the result of a vortex.

Gallery: Infamous Bell Rock in Sedona (top left). Next (middle left) is a camera light anomaly captured by the author but what some would call a “light vortex”. The Sedona Crystal Vortex (lower left) is one of the many New Age shops in Downtown Sedona that capitalized on its mystical reputation. A twisted desert juniper tree near the base of Bell Rock (right). All photos by S. Hill.

Glastonbury, UK: A town in Somerset, England that has evidence of occupation for thousands of years and has accumulated extensive colorful legends. Glastonbury is recognized as a key location for the development of “New Age” beliefs. The place is said to be sacred and magical. Some reasoned that its specialness comes from the vortex energy derived from the intersection of ley lines that occurs here.

Bermuda Triangle: The first recognized “vortex”. The mysterious phenomenon of the location is still hyped by paranormal writers who erroneously claim that disappearances of ships and planes must have a more dramatic cause other than mechanical troubles, human error, or rough seas and storms. 

Dragon’s Triangle: Said to be a “twin” area of the Bermuda Triangle off the coast of Japan where vessels disappear. In 1953, the research ship No. 5 Kaiyo Maru was sunk in the “Devil’s Sea” area after encountering an erupting undersea volcano. While this was undoubtedly an unusual incident, it was not mysterious. The remains of the ship were positively identified in the area where the submarine volcano exploded. The claims about missing boats or aircraft were real, but exaggerated by mystery mongers like author Charles Berlitz who wrote about both triangle areas and other paranormal subjects. Not everyone looked at the statistics and facts, certainly not Berliz who cherry-picked and inflated certain events to bolster the mystery.

For a time, the Great Lakes (Lake Michigan) Triangle was also considered an especially dangerous area for ships. But, as with other deep water areas, the disappearance of vessels might be immediately undetermined but usually not so mysterious.

Paranormal Triangles: Drawing triangles is easy; you simply need three points of reference. Paranormalists who conclude that certain areas have more than the usual number of weird experiences and phenomena sometimes refer to locations as areas of “high strangeness”. If a triangle can be drawn, a catchy name can be given and the weird stories multiply. “Weird” areas with a concentration of reports of UFOs, monsters, ghosts, demonic activity, anomalous atmospheric events, strange behavior of living things, disorientation, illness, compass anomalies, deaths, and disappearances are frequently referred to as “paranormal vortex” areas. These areas may be large or localized.  Famous land triangle areas include the Bridgewater Triangle in Massachusetts and the Bennington Triangle in Vermont. These are associated with disappearances, suicides, murders, earth lights, mystery aircraft sightings, the appearance of strange creatures, time slips, hauntings, and almost any other kind of creepy tale you can think of. 

The trend to label areas of high strangeness and popularize them in the media is growing. Calling an area a “paranormal vortex” suggest that some mysterious and unidentified “energy” is behind the myriad of strange goings on. It enhances their reputation and makes people far more curious about them. Examples include Skinwalker Ranch and the greater Uinta basin in Utah, San Luis Valley, California, Mt Shasta, California, and Dulce, New Mexico. 

Places that seem even a bit unusual or have a mysterious history – such as Ringing Rocks in Pennsylvania, the Hudson River Valley of New York, and the Superstition Mountains of Arizona – are also called vortex areas by some paranormal enthusiasts. The application of the term “vortex” to describe areas of paranormal activity is vague and inconsistent because there is no concrete phenomenon to pin down. Ghost hunters will invoke the term to describe any localized incident where they felt strange, had equipment malfunction or recorded environmental anomalies. For a few years, paranormal investigators who took flash photographs with cameras would catch illuminated swirls and call them “vortexes” of paranormal energy.

Conclusion on the paranormal vortex

The concept of vortex areas as zones of paranormal or spiritual energy forces remains popular today even though the evidence points strongly to the vortices being imaginary constructs developed and propagated by creative people. Vile vortices ended up being a debased device to explain everything paranormal but nothing verifiable in a particular location. Mathematic and geometric attempts to quantify a paranormal area failed because the earth is not based on a design – its near-surface is complex and heterogeneous, and the subjective data didn’t stand up to scrutiny.

Humans are fantastic at identifying patterns in occurrences and making spurious correlations that aren’t connected to the real cause, especially if those means result in media attention or attract tourist dollars. Paranormalists rely on vague, subjective feelings, weak data, speculation, and dramatic scary stories to convince an audience of their claims, all of which have been used to promote vortex areas. The energy or paranormal vortex is a handy way to combine odd experiences into a location and attempt to explain them. Inventive writers and businesspeople played up spiritual and sciencey themes to enhance mystery and magic in the world. 

As great as it would be to discover an energy vortex and pin down the cause of so-called paranormal activity, the evidence supporting vortices as a particular, genuine feature of earth fizzled out.

Bibliography

In addition to the inline reference links above, the following sources were used.

Dunning, Brian Skeptoid Podcast “The Bermuda Triangle and the Devil’s Sea.” 20 Nov 2012. https://skeptoid.com/episodes/4337 

Dunning, Brian Skeptoid Podcast “The Sedona Energy Vortex.” 11 Jun 2013. https://skeptoid.com/episodes/4366. 

Kusche, Larry. The Bermuda Triangle Mystery Solved. 1995.

Litster, John. The Oregon Vortex. 1960. 

Sanderson, Ivan T. “The 12 Devil’s Graveyards Around The World” Reprint from SAGA UFO report Special 1973.

“Sedona History” https://www.sedonaaz.gov/home/showdocument?id=34040

“Vile Vortices” from The Paranormal Encyclopedia https://www.paranormal-encyclopedia.com/v/vile-vortices/

#BermudaTriangle #DevilPlaces #DevilSSea #DragonTriangle #energyVortex #highStrangeness #leyLines #limestone #mysteriousPlaces #Paranormal #paranormalPlaces #paranormalVortex #quartz #SpookyGeology #vileVortices https://sharonahill.com/?p=7351

Postcards from Zarkatb’s ey’re

If the phenomenon violates the laws of nature as we know them, it does so within a sufficiently narrow margin to fit into the space-time framework that constitutes our private universe.

#AsemicArt #AsemicPostcards #AsemicPostcard #AsemicText #AsemicWriting #DeconstructedText #Fantasy #HighStrangeness #Phantasmagoria #Poetry #ProsePoetry #SpeculativePoetry #DigitalArt
#Art #Collage #CollageArt #Art

https://asemictarot.wordpress.com/2026/02/25/postcards-from-zarkatbs-eyre/

Postcards from Zarkatb’s ey’re

If the phenomenon violates the laws of nature as we know them, it does so within a sufficiently narrow margin to fit into the space-time framework that constitutes our private universe. By Bertrand…

Asemic Tarot
Supernatural Creep: When explanations slide off to the fringes

Originally published as Supernatural Creep: The Slippery Slope to Unfalsifiability for my column Sounds Sciencey on csicop.org May 29, 2013.

I’m taking a step beyond sciencey with the following topic. What happens when science doesn’t cooperate with your subject area? Researchers of unexplained events may get frustrated and disenchanted with the scientific process when the eyewitness accounts they collect are too weird to explain via conventional means. They go unconventional.

Captain Jean-Baptiste Duhamel led the hunt for a beast that was attacking and devouring victims in the Gevaudan, France, in 1794. He had a problem. He could not catch and kill the man-eating monster. Being a proud man, he had to justify why he could not conquer this particular foe. Since the option that he was an inadequate huntsman was not acceptable, the creature must be supernatural in its abilities to escape his capture. The characteristics of the beast were exaggerated—it was huge, cunning, and not just an ordinary wolf. Captain Duhamel left defeated by what must truly be an extraordinary beast.

The cognitive dissonance experienced by the French captain is reflected today by those who can’t capture Bigfoot. When normal processes and causes fail to satisfactorily explain events or answers to questions, then the reasoning slips beyond nature, into super nature, beyond the testable claims of science.

I call this “supernatural creep.” Although, I swear I’m not the first one to name it as such. I searched to find where I have seen this referenced before. (If anyone knows, please email me so I can give the originator due credit.) Once I noticed this kind of reasoning, I saw it frequently. Wherever I come across this concept, it reveals a bit about human nature:

If you have to choose between the belief or a rational explanation, the rational explanation may be that which gets rejected.

The effect of supernatural creep can be seen with UFOs, anomalous natural phenomena (Fortean topics), and in bizarre stories categorized as “high strangeness” (which I’ll explain a bit further on in this piece). A perfect example is that of “black dogs” whose appearance is spectral or demonic and is associated with either protection from or nearness of bad spirits. Could it be just a big black dog? Witnesses perceive that it’s more than that. When the circumstances feel uncanny, we slip into thoughts of the supernatural. An enjoyable book that illustrates supernatural creep quite nicely is Three Men Seeking Monsters by Nick Redfern. Fun stuff.

With phantom black dogs, there is a connection to local legends and ghost stories. A modern example of the dispute about supernatural creep is evident in the Bigfoot/Sasquatch community.

Bigfoot proponents generally fall into two camps: those who search for a real animal that functions as nature intended (called ‘apers’) and those who entertain the option that the entity is not natural (paranormalists).

In their 2006 book, The Yowie: In Search of Australia’s Bigfoot, authors Tony Healy and Paul Cropper appear to have a parting of the ways when trying to explain all the Yowie accounts at face value—some of which, like our American Bigfoot are pretty bizarre. What is up with an animal that is sometimes described as having three toes, sometimes four or five? And, after all this time, why can’t we trap one or find a body? The creature has a stupendous ability to escape human grasp by eluding our cameras and leaving only tenuous, dubious traces of its corporeal existence. It can run outrageously fast and may be able to see infrared light. With the Yowie, we can’t think of a way to get a wild man on the island continent. It seems so implausible. But as Healy and Cropper note, it’s uncomfortable to explain the Yowie as a paranormal entity, perhaps as a psychic phenomenon, because it results in replacing one mystery with another.

Characteristics of hairy hominids or other unidentified cryptids may be just marginally odd—avoiding detection for decades among people, expert at hiding in plain sight, unusually developed senses of hearing or sight, fantastic strength or incredible speed. Or, they may get a bit spooky—glowing eyes, inability to be photographed, immunity to bullets, seen everywhere but found nowhere. They get to the point where it’s beyond natural—telepathy, shape-shifting, apporting or dis-apporting, signaling illness or death. In the case of some monster sightings, they are associated with UFO sightings, sychronicities, and time loss or distortion.

In order to hang on to the literal interpretation of eyewitness accounts, researchers may take tiny steps away from a purely natural explanation of their quarry. If the animal is shot at close range, why is it not injured or killed? Instead of questioning the story (or the marksmanship of the gunman), the assumption is that the thing must have some extra quality like bullet-proof skin, or perhaps it is impervious to bullets. If these stories are regarded as valid, and more like it come along, instead of doubting the witness, the researcher concludes there must be something paranormal going on to explain it.

The slip down the supernatural slope is really apparent when there are accounts of “high strangeness“—mind-boggling stories that have absurd elements. This term was originally used by Dr. J. Allen Hynek to describe extremely peculiar UFO cases that appeared to be associated with dream-like details, such as mysterious phone calls, electronic glitches, and Men in Black visits. If a report is one of “high strangeness,” it’s more than the typical “I saw a UFO” or “I saw a Bigfoot” story. It turns into a “I saw a Bigfoot go into a UFO” story—a whole other level of weirdness that now strains a natural explanation, if true.

And so it goes with Bigfooters. I recently read a blog post about a person who was rejected from the Bigfoot Field Research Organization (BRFO) because he dared mention a telepathic experience related to a Bigfoot encounter. There are Bigfoot researchers who discard reports that involve any paranormal or supernatural element because it sounds less credible to admit such ideas if they wish their work to be taken seriously. (This is a bit weird for the BFRO, I thought, since Matt Moneymaker ascribes some incredibly bizarre, paranormal talents to Bigfoot like the ability to “stun” people and immobilize them. I can’t take his speculations seriously.)

In my previous writings, I noted that it appeared that the ghost investigation field seemed to be moving away from the sciencey focus and more into the supernatural, dealing with demons, angels, and religious qualities of hauntings. Science is failing them, as well. In order to retain that important core that ghosts, or whatever X-file, is real, the natural explanations are no longer suitable as explanations; it must be something beyond human understanding. The cryptozoological community is sliding down a similar path at the behest of authors like Redfern who think that the field should expand to include “zooform” phenomena—entities, not actual animals, that appear in animal form. This would constitute a shift from scientific inquiry to a completely experienced-based view. How convenient. You gain great flexibility when you discount natural laws.

You may be able to see the immediate problem with an experience-based view and accounts of high strangeness. Since many skeptical paranormal researchers are very aware of the problems with eyewitness accounts, we notice the mistake certain non-skeptical researchers make when reading popular accounts of local tales or Charles Fort’s collection of books. The writers take every detail of the witness at face value! We know, however, that people mess up observations. We know that our memories are flawed, and we know that stories change over time, often becoming very different from the original account. Stories are poor evidence. To build a conclusion on just these story elements means that you must reject the foundation of knowledge we already have about how the world works (which is pretty well tested) and accept that there are visitors from other dimensions harassing our rural population or that we are able to conjure up monsters just with our collective mind power. That’s absurd. I’ll need more than a few good stories to accept that.

Supernatural creep is the way researchers hold onto their cherished ideas that a mysterious phenomenon, as they perceive it, is really out there. Being too invested in the idea to let it go, they reinvent reality instead.

By the way, the Beast of the Gevaudan? It was wolves. They were only unusual in that they were really hungry and good at catching people and not getting caught themselves. They were eventually dispatched. But the legend remains of the monsters of the Gevaudan. It’s too good of a story to give up.

References

Bord, Janet and Colin. 1981. Alien Animals. Stackpole Books.

Healy, T. and P. Cropper. 2006. The Yowie: In Search of Australia’s Bigfoot. Anomalist Books.

Redfern, Nick. 2004. Three Men Seeking Monsters. Paraview Pocket Books.

Smith, Jay M. 2011. Monsters of the Gevaudan: The Making of a Beast. Harvard University Press.

#BeastOfGevaudan #Bigfoot #blackDogs #cryptids #highStrangeness #Paranormal #Sasquatch #supernatural #Yowie #zooform https://sharonahill.com/?p=5112

The Welsh Gwyllion

In Wales, the gwyllion, mischievous female mountain spirits, have an uncanny knack for leading travelers astray—think of them as your personal GPS malfunction, but spookier. Keep calm, offer snacks, and resist following strange women in fog. After all, cheese could be the key to navigating the Welsh wilderness, or at least to making new ghostly friends!

https://mysterioustimes.co.uk/2025/11/25/the-welsh-gwyllion/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social #HighStrangeness #wales

Discovering Gwyllion: Wales' Enigmatic Mountain Spirits

In Wales, the gwyllion, mischievous female mountain spirits, have an uncanny knack for leading travelers astray—think of them as your personal GPS malfunction, but spookier. Keep calm, offer snacks…

Mysterious Times