The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

The mystery of the frozen lake that spits out human remains once a year

2024-03-24T22:13:56.545Z

Highlights: The mysterious Roopkund lake, a place in the Himalayas located 5 thousand meters high and surrounded by rock glaciers. One month a year, always at the same time, when the glacial lake is due to thaw. Hundreds of human remains, skeletons mixed with pieces of meat and hair preserved by the area's dry and frozen climate. DNA evidence indicated that there were two distinct groups of people, one a family or tribe of closely related individuals, and a second somewhat smaller group.


It is at 5,029 meters above sea level and frozen for 11 months a year. But in the remaining month, hundreds of human skeletons appear on its banks.


The incredible story of Roopkund Lake, a place in the Himalayas located

5 thousand meters high

and surrounded by rock glaciers.

Its peculiarity: every so often

hundreds of human remains emerge.

The most plausible theory has just been thrown out, and now the mystery is even bigger.

The first reports regarding the remains that have been found date back to the 19th century.

Then an unusual fact was already noticed.

It happens for one month a year

, always at the same time, when the glacial lake is due to thaw.

Then a chilling secret comes to the surface:

hundreds of human remains,

skeletons mixed with pieces of meat and hair preserved by the area's dry and frozen climate.

The first reports regarding the remains that have been found date back to the 19th century.

Along with the first myths and legends that spoke of monsters and the like, we stop in

1942,

the year a British forest guard, HK Madhwal, arrived in the area.

The man was in the lake a few months before the thaw, and then he was already able to appreciate the strange episode that was being experienced in the heights of the Himalayas.

Madhwal believed that the bones he had seen were due to the death of some small group that was passing by,

he did not give it any more importance.

However, when the thaw revealed the interior of Roopkund, Madhwal couldn't believe what he was seeing.

They were no longer a pair of bones.

The melting

showed a “valley of death”,

hundreds of skeletons that opened the possibility of a macabre massacre that was totally unknown.

The remains appear one month a year, always at the same time, when the glacial lake is due to thaw.

In addition, pieces of wood, iron spikes, some leather slippers and even jewelry were found, but no one could determine their exact origin.

Soldiers, warriors, epidemic, group suicide?

The immediate assumption, being 1942 and in the middle of World War II, was that these were the remains of

Japanese soldiers

who had died en route while fleeing through India.

Then came other theories: from a possible

epidemic,

to possible landslide, Kashmiri warriors returning from the battle of Tibet in 1841, or perhaps some kind of

group suicide

in the form of a ritual.

Thus we arrive at the year

2004,

when an expedition of researchers organized by

National Geographic

went to the area to find out once and for all the secret that the glacial lake hid.

The mysterious Roopkund lake, a place in the Himalayas located 5 thousand meters high and surrounded by rock glaciers.

From there, 30 skeletons and remains were taken to the Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad for a series of

DNA tests.

The samples were sent to the Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit at the University of Oxford to carry out radiocarbon dating on the remains.

The results revealed something much stranger than anyone could guess:

the skeletons dated back to 850 AD.

Furthermore, DNA evidence indicated that there were

two distinct groups of people

, one a family or tribe of closely related individuals, and a second somewhat smaller group, possibly locals hired as porters and guides.

The bodies only have wounds on the head and shoulders, as if the blows had come from above.

When the analyzes began, the scientists looked at several details.

They had all died in a similar way,

with blows to the head.

However, those deep gaps in the skulls did not seem to be the result of weapons, but rather something rounded.

Furthermore, the bodies only had those wounds on the head and shoulders, as if

the blows had come from above.

A terrible hail storm?​


Thus the conclusion was reached that has lasted until some time ago: more than 200 people died due to

a sudden and devastating hail storm.

Trapped in the valley and with nowhere to hide or seek shelter, the rain wiped out the entire group.

And we say until a while ago, because in a study published in

Nature

, a team led by Éadaoin Harney analyzed the

DNA extracted from 38 skeletons

.

This analysis now revealed that it was actually different populations that experienced deadly incidents at the lake, including one that occurred in the 19th century.

Most of the skeletons analyzed belong to an Indian ethnic group, but the DNA of another 14 reveals “the heritage of the Greek island of the eastern Mediterranean.”

According to the study: "We found that the Roopkund skeletons belong to

three genetically distinct groups

that were deposited during multiple events, separated in time by approximately 1,000 years. These findings refute previous suggestions that the Roopkund lake skeletons were deposited in a only catastrophic event."

Apparently, most of the skeletons analyzed belonged to

an Indian ethnic group

, but the DNA of another 14 revealed

“the heritage of the Greek island of the eastern Mediterranean

. ”

The ancestry of a single individual appears to have been in Southeast Asia, extremely distant and in the opposite direction.

The mystery still remains without answers.

Instead of a single storm killing them all, radiocarbon dating indicated that

the locals died more than 1,000 years ago

, while the “foreigners” were much more recent, probably

around 1800

.

Even stranger, the oldest group appears to have come from many parts of India, with at least two centuries between the oldest and youngest populations.

Findings so unlikely that researchers verified them by testing isotopes of the bones, confirming large variations in their diets and probable places of origin.

So

the mystery now is even bigger.

Source: Gizmodo.

See also

See also

A dog was chasing a cat and both had to be rescued by firefighters

See also

See also

If there is a war between the US and Russia, almost all of humanity would die of hunger

See also

See also

An amateur detective found dozens of pieces from the Malaysia Airlines flight

GML

Source: clarin

All news articles on 2024-03-24

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.