First, no one can agree on where the Antikythera
mechanism was made or who designed it. Popular belief was that it was made by
the Greeks due to its instructions all being in Greek (about a million of our
tax dollars were probably spent arriving at that genius conclusion) but serious
research published in serious places suggested the design came from Sicily.
The mechanism, aside from placing you at serious risk for
severing a finger, was supposedly used to figure out astronomical positions.
The problem with that is that at the time this thing was made, no one had yet
discovered laws of gravity or how heavenly bodies moved.
In other words, the Antikythera mechanism appears to have
functions that no one alive at that time would have understood, and no single
mechanical purpose of that era (such as navigating ships) explains the crazy
number of functions and settings this machine has.
It's a scrap from a time machine that exploded the moment
it arrived in the past.
The Baigong Pipes
The Mystery:
In an area of China not known to ever contain people, let
alone industry, there
are
three mysterious triangular openings on top of a mountain
containing hundreds of ancient rusty iron pipes of unknown origin. Some of the
pipes go deep into the mountain. Some of them go into a nearby salt water lake.
There are more pipes in the lake, and more still running east-west along the
lake shore. Some of the larger pipes are 40 cm in diameter, are of uniform size
and are placed in what seems like purposeful patterns.
So what's the big deal? Well, archaeologists have dated
the pipes to a time when people were still trying to figure out how to cook
meat without setting their back-hair on fire, let alone casting iron.
Why Can't They Solve It?
Oddly, the pipes are clean of debris despite being older
than Zeus. This suggests that they were not simply shoved into the ground for
the hell of it, but actually used for something. Oh, and did we mention the
mountain is completely inhospitable to human life?
As usual, a faction of nutjobs believes the Baigong Pipes
to be an ancient astronomy lab or even spacecraft launching site left by
extraterrestrials. This is possible, since the pipes contain a proportion of
silica close to what occurs on Mars. Of course, the manhole cover outside your
house does also, so take that with a grain of salt.
Some say they are a hoax. We must politely remind those
people that you can't wipe your ass in China without the government knowing,
let alone set up a fucking iron forge and start burying pipes in the ground for
the purpose of confusing passers-by.
The Giant Stone Balls of Costa Rica
The Mystery:
Costa Rica and a few
surrounding areas are scattered with
giant stone balls. They are smooth and perfectly
spherical, or nearly so. Some of them are quite small, a few inches in
diameter, but some of them are as large as eight feet in diameter weighing
several tons.
They have been chiseled to
perfection by persons unknown, despite the fact that Costa Rica is still not
scheduled to enter the Bronze Age until 2013. The are balls everywhere and
serve no apparent purpose, like a swing club on Gentlemen's Night.
Some of the balls have been blasted apart by locals
hoping to find gold, coffee beans, or even babies. Some have been rolled
around, but some are too heavy to move even with a bulldozer. Not that they
have bulldozers in Costa Rica.
Why
Can't They Solve It?
About the most useful
information anyone has gotten is that there are not, under any circumstance,
any quarries anywhere near the balls. This information is actually useless
considering the balls are carved from volcanic rock.
The Baghdad Batteries
The Mystery:
The Baghdad Batteries are
a series of artifacts found in the area of Mesopotamia dating from the early
centuries AD. This was the approximate time when Gozer the Gozarian was roaming
the lands, morphing into whatever you thought of and then devouring you [
source].
When archaeologists
stumbled upon the batteries, they assumed they were just regular old clay pots
for storage, but that theory quickly went out the window since they each
contain a copper rod that shows evidence of acid corrosion. Now, in case you
weren't the biggest nerd in school, this means that the pots probably contained
a liquid that would interact with the copper and produce an electrical charge.
If true, they predate the first known modern battery by hundreds of years.
Why Can't They Solve It?
Well, it's not like we
keep digging up ancient camcorders over there. Some stone reliefs called the
"Dendera light" depict what some believe to be electrical arc lights,
which would require something like the Baghdad Batteries to power. Others believe
that theory is incredibly retarded.
More reasonable types say
the batteries may have been used to electroplate items with gold. Others say
medicine men could have used the batteries to shock people (giving the
impression they had mystical powers or whatever).
It doesn't help that the
batteries are currently located in the Baghdad Museum, which means potential
researchers have a sporting chance of being blown to shit on any given day.
The Bloop
The Mystery:
Tired of having its mind
blown by the guys in the archeology department, in 1997 modern science's mind
pulled itself up off the mat and triumphantly blew itself.
In that year, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recorded
a
strange sound in the ocean. Strange and LOUD. So loud that it was
picked up by two separate microphones 3,000 fucking miles apart. The sound,
dubbed "The Bloop," doesn't sound like anything at normal speed.
However, the NOAA did us the favor of speeding up the recording to 16 times the
normal speed, causing it to sound like a turd dropping into the toilet. Bloop!
Except, you know, awesomely loud.
Why Can't They Solve It?
There is no animal big
enough or loud enough to make that kind of noise, not by a long shot. Not a
blue whale, not a howler monkey, not a startled teenage girl.
Not long after the NOAA
posted the sound to their web site, some HP Lovecraft fans on the internet
quite reasonably decided that The Bloop must have been made by Lovecraft's
Cthulhu, a giant, murderous squid-dragon-thing.
No comments:
Post a Comment