

My first thought is, do political dissidents usually kill people? They may be starving but they could still talk and ask for food. These camps were located near the Mountain of the Dead.

The gulag camps were places of extreme hardship where political dissidents were sent to die. Other theories suggest that perhaps escapees from a “nearby” gulag camp killed the students. It has to be noted that while they did find these huge animal prints, they did not find evidence of bear prints or those of any other animal native to the area that may have been stalking the students. This was from another expedition in the early 1950s.) (To be clear, the photo above left is not taken from the Russian Yeti show – I wasn’t able to find a still photo of anything like that from the show. They took photos of them, but these were covered up with all the other information from subsequent Russian investigations. They weren’t human footprints, they looked just like Bigfoot prints. What we learned from the Discovery channel program is that the first searchers on the scene saw huge footprints around the camp. One of my sources said that he privately felt that UFOs had attacked and killed the students. He had trouble coming to any real conclusions, so he put decided to write that the students were killed by “an unknown elemental force which they were unable to overcome.” How’s that for a bureaucratic explanation? (Other translations state his conclusion as: “a compelling unknown force.”) The man charged with figuring out what happened was Lev Ivanov, a Soviet investigator. Boris Vozrozhdenny, who examined the corpses, concluded that three of the students died from fatal injuries so severe, that it was outside the realm of possibility that a human could have caused them. This group had sustained broken bones and serious internal injuries – all without any cuts or marks on their skin.ĭr.

The rest were found in a dug-out snow cave they had made, as though they were hiding from something.
#WHY DID THEY MAKE IT SO HARD TO CLOSE SKYPE ACCOUNT CRACKED#
One of them had a cracked skull but died of hypothermia, along with his two companions.

Three more, two males and one female, were found in a row, as though they were trying to get back to their tent. The researchers speculated they must have climbed the tree to see if they could find their camp and return to it. What was unusual was the wood they were burning came from branches that were taken from 16 feet (5 m) up in the trees. Two of the young men had died of hypothermia next to a small fire they had built on the edge of the forest. Ultimately, the searchers found the bodies. In all the accounts of this report that I’ve read, no one has ever mentioned a flashlight being found. We have to remember where these students were – in a desolate mountainous area, in temperatures below freezing -22 F (-30 C) in pitch black darkness. The tent doors were still buttoned shut, according to one of my sources, so the students had cut their way out of the tent. Some speculate they were made so they could see what was stalking them outside. There were deliberate cuts in the tents which investigators were able to determine were made from the inside. When the first search party arrived, three weeks or so after the tragedy, they found their abandoned tents that contained survival gear such as heavy boots, warm outerwear, knives – things they could have used to help themselves survive. On the night they died, they were about 6 miles from the targeted mountain. This hike was considered a “Category III” hike, and as all the students were experienced hikers and skiers, they hoped to accomplish this goal. They had gone hiking into the wilds of the Ural mountains hoping to reach Otorten mountain. On the night of February 2, 1959, in the desolate area of the Ural Mountains, 9 students and graduates of the former Ural Polytechnic Institute, now Ural Federal University met a mysterious and deeply disturbing end. Let’s investigate the mystery and the program. Last night Discovery channel ran a program, Russian Yeti: The Killer Lives, that came to some very interesting conclusions about what happened to nine students in the wilds of the Ural Mountains in 1959. But can we believe the program’s conclusions? The mystery is legitimate, the tragedy did happen. They hint that a monster Yeti, Bigfoot’s cousin, may be responsible. A new cryptozoology investigation, Russian Yeti: The Killer Lives, aired last night.
