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2,000 people disappeared without a single track. Food was still on the tables, but the people were gone. One of the greatest unsolved mysteries of 1930.
#mystery #horror #truehorror #unsolved #scary #paranormal #1930s #creepy #foryou #viral #ghostvillage #unexplained
Transcripción
00:00They say the Arctic doesn't keep secrets. The ice preserves everything, from ancient beasts to forgotten tragedies.
00:12This is the story of one such place, the lost village of Voronaya, a name that translates to Crow's Landing, though no crows ever flew that far north.
00:22Our journey begins in the winter of 1934, the Soviet Union, in its relentless push to conquer the frontiers of nature.
00:52The ship dropped off 28 people, enough supplies to last two years, a powerful shortwave radio and crates of scientific equipment.
01:22The reducers of tasked with the failed two of ALHHHHTs.
01:38For months, silence was attributed to harsh, arctic conditions. Damaged antennas, generator failure, aurora borealis playing havoc with radiowaves all were plausible explanations.
01:50Explanations
01:51But when the spring thaw of 1935 arrived and the ice receded enough for a relief vessel
01:56to be dispatched, the mystery only deepened.
02:00The ship found Voronaya exactly as it had been left, but utterly empty.
02:04There were no signs of a struggle.
02:20In the living quarters beds were neatly made, personal letters were left open on desks,
02:29and clothes were hung to dry by stoves that had long since gone cold.
02:33The entire population of twenty-eight men and women had simply vanished.
02:37The only thing out of place was found in the radio operator's hut.
02:41The equipment was smashed, but not with brute force.
02:45It looked as if it had been meticulously and deliberately taken apart piece by piece.
02:50On the floor, beneath a tangle of wires, the search party found the operator's logbook.
02:56The last several pages were filled not with weather data but with frantic, almost illegible
03:00scrawls.
03:02The handwriting deteriorated with each entry, becoming a chaotic jumble of words and symbols.
03:08The final entry, dated three days after the last official transmission, contained a single,
03:14chilling phrase repeated over and over, don't listen to the singing.
03:19What singing?
03:20The nearest indigenous populations were hundreds of miles away.
03:25Investigators were baffled.
03:26The official report, buried deep in Soviet archives, concluded that the inhabitants had
03:31succumbed to a collective psychosis, a form of polar madness, and wandered out onto the ice
03:37to their deaths.
03:38The case was closed.
03:40The village was declared lost.
03:42But stories persist among the sailors and pilots who traversed those icy waters.
03:47Stories whispered in the dead of the polar night.
03:50They say that sometimes on a clear, cold night when the fog rolls in thick from the sea, you
03:55can still see the faint lights of Voronaya.
03:59And if you're foolish enough to get close, you'll hear it.
04:02A sound carried on the wind.
04:04It's not human, and it's not animal.
04:07It's a strange, discordant melody that seems to come from everywhere at once, from the ice,
04:12from the sky, from the very air you breathe.
04:15They say it's a beautiful, hypnotic sound.
04:18A song that promises warmth in the freezing cold, company in the crushing loneliness.
04:23A song that pulls you in, beckoning you to leave your shelter and walk out into the endless
04:28white.
04:29Decades later, in the late 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, a group of independent
04:35researchers, funded by a wealthy paranormal enthusiast, decided to mount an expedition
04:40to find the lost village.
04:42Using declassified maps and satellite imagery, they pinpointed Voronaya's location.
04:47They were a team of five, a historian, a physicist, a medic, a seasoned Arctic guide, and a documentarian
04:54named Elena, who carried a state-of-the-art digital camera, a far cry from the grainy film of the
05:001930s.
05:01They found a village just as the first search party had.
05:05It was a time capsule of dread.
05:07The wooden buildings were warped and grey, encrusted with a century of ice, but still standing,
05:12the oppressive silence was the first thing that hit them.
05:16No wind, no birds, nothing.
05:18Just the crunch of their boots on the snow.
05:21They set up a base camp in the main hall, carefully documenting everything.
05:25The historian was ecstatic, calling it the Mary Celeste of the Arctic.
05:30The physicists set up sensors to monitor electromagnetic fields and infrasound, looking for a scientific
05:36explanation for the alleged singing.
05:38For the first two days, everything was normal.
05:41They filmed, they took readings, they catalogued the frozen artifacts of a lost era.
05:46The atmosphere was eerie, but their scientific purpose kept the fear at bay.
05:51The trouble started on the third night.
05:53Their guide, a native Nenich man named Yuri, grew agitated.
05:58He kept looking out the window, staring into the swirling fog that had descended upon them.
06:03He claimed he could hear something, a low hum, just at the edge of his hearing.
06:08The physicists' equipment picked up nothing.
06:10The others heard nothing.
06:12They dismissed it as fatigue, the strain of the expedition playing tricks on his mind.
06:17By the fourth night, Elena, the documentarian, heard it too.
06:21She was reviewing the day's footage when she noticed a faint melodic distortion on the
06:25audio track.
06:26At first, she thought it was equipment interference, but when she took off her headphones, she could
06:33still hear it.
06:34A faint, ethereal music?
06:36She described it in her audio diary as like wind chimes made of glass, but sad.
06:41She tried to get the others to listen, but only Yuri seemed to hear what she heard.
06:46He refused to leave the building, clutching a small, hand-carved totem.
06:51On the fifth day, the physicist, a skeptic named Anton, went missing.
06:56He had gone out to check on a perimeter sensor just fifty yards from the main hall.
07:00He never came back.
07:01They followed his tracks in the snow.
07:04They led in a perfectly straight line away from the village, out towards the frozen sea
07:09until they simply stopped.
07:11There were no signs of a struggle, no other tracks.
07:14It was as if he had been lifted straight up into the air.
07:18Panic set in.
07:18The remaining four barricaded themselves in the hall.
07:22The singing was louder now, everyone could hear it.
07:25It was no longer beautiful.
07:27It was a deeply unsettling harmony of notes that seemed to violate the very laws of acoustics.
07:32It burrowed into their skulls, making their teeth ache and their minds race.
07:37The historian began reciting party slogans from the 1930s, his eyes wide and unfocused.
07:43The medic administered sedatives, but they had no effect.
07:47Elena kept filming.
07:49Her footage from that final night is the stuff of nightmares.
07:52The camera shakes violently.
07:54The audio is dominated by the ever-present maddening song and the historian's nonsensical
07:59chanting.
08:00Through the frosted window, the fog outside seems to glow with a pale, sickly light.
08:05At one point, Elena swings the camera towards Yuri, who is now standing by the door.
08:10He's speaking in his native tongue, his voice filled with terror.
08:14His translated words later revealed he was pleading with something he called the Siren of the Ice,
08:20begging it to take him and spare the others.
08:23Then the door bursts open, splintering inwards as if struck by an immense, unseen force.
08:28A blast of impossibly cold air floods the room.
08:32The camera falls to the floor, but it keeps recording.
08:36For a few agonizing seconds, all you can see is the rough wooden floorboards as the inhuman
08:40singing reaches a deafening crescendo, then silence.
08:44The footage continues for another hour, showing nothing but the empty, silent room, before the
08:50battery finally dies.
08:52The camera and Elena's diary were recovered a year later by a passing helicopter pilot,
08:57who was drawn off course by a strange energy reading.
09:00Of the five expedition members there was no trace.
09:04Just like the original 28 inhabitants of Voronaya, they had vanished into the Arctic air.
09:09The footage has been analyzed by experts around the world.
09:13No one can explain the light, the sound, or the impossibly strong force that broke down
09:18the door.
09:19The mystery of Voronaya, the crow's landing, remains unsolved.
09:24It's a ghost story written in the ice, a warning that some places in this world are not
09:28meant for us.
09:29And that sometimes when the Arctic calls to you with a beautiful, deadly song, the only
09:34thing you can do is not listen.
09:53But there's a little bit of a message that gave you a beautiful wave of God's appearance.
09:56So let me go.
09:57And if we look at this image of the book, then we can go into the event.
09:59We have a little bit of a chance to think of what we would do, because we'll have an
09:59ancient international idea of our life.
10:00So let's just look at this image of a different window.
10:01Let's take a look at it.
10:02So let's just look at it.
10:04It's going through to a different form.
10:04There's a weird thing here.
10:05Our attention here comes from here, and thirdly, and thirdly, and thirdly, and thirdly, and thirdly,
10:07the school's communicating, and thirdly-cultural, and thirdly, and thirdly, and thirdly, and thirdly, and thirdly have written through this.
10:09And there will be another question that I have a lot of time for this.
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