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Missing 411-Western United States & Canada: Unexplained disappearances of North Americans that have never been solved: Volume 1

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MCS SkeptiCamp 2017 – Kyle Polich – Frontiers in Woo". Monterey County Skeptics. January 8, 2017. Archived from the original on February 13, 2017 . Retrieved January 9, 2017– via YouTube. Since the area was established in 1936, there have been more than 563 reported cases of people vanishing without a trace. The most famous case is that of Harold Holt, an Australian prime minister who disappeared while swimming at Lake Mead in 1967. a b c d e Hill, Sharon (September 12, 2013). "The Ketchum Project: What to Believe about Bigfoot DNA 'Science' (Spring 2013)". CSICOP. Center for Inquiry. Archived from the original on November 25, 2016 . Retrieved February 7, 2017. This is due in part to the fact that there are fewer places to hide in rural areas, and search efforts tend to be more focused and effective.

Forgotten the title or the author of a book? Our BookSleuth is specially designed for you. Visit BookSleuth Speaking of animals, there’s of course the dog whistle or similar techniques that could certainly be used to make a dog run into a forest to make its master follow him, and a variety of more sophisticated technologies currently under development, mainly to be used as forms of crowd control. What should be done first is a comparison with the distribution of times at which people from a random non-Missing 411 sample disappear in the same areas. Given that the smallest useful sample is about 100 people, it would have to be for a whole U.S. state at least, or for all national parks in a country, since the largest cluster in the Yosemite is currently in the 50s, I believe. Without that, there’s no point in speculating any further. Brandabur, Michelle (June 4, 2021). " 'I am not afraid of the park. I am terrified': TikTokers are freaking out over just how many people are disappearing in national forests". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on July 5, 2021 . Retrieved July 5, 2021.

Speaking of bizarre and inexplicable, these books and documentaries describe a growing number of cases (now in the low thousands) of people going missing or being found under strange circumstances. When I say strange, what I mean is that, for starters, all of the usual suspects have been ruled out, like animal predation, human crime, voluntary disappearance, drowning, etc. Or there at least isn’t enough evidence for any of these. The main analytical problem with using this as a profile point is that while it is a good place to start, the fact that the person wasn’t found is a better indicator of which variables prevent people from being found, more than it is an indicator of why or how they got lost in the first place. I will discuss this in more detail when I get to related profile points like the role of bad weather. There are a few ways you can listen to the Missing 411 podcast. The easiest way is to head over to Audible.com, where you can sign up for a free trial and listen to the first episode. Even if the name was selected purely on the basis of bad feelings, it may indicate that dangerous terrain, gases, radiation, or infrasound can be found in the area. Something that could be invisible and undetectable without very specific instruments, but nevertheless entirely normal and real. And even if the name is just related to the remoteness, more remote and hard-to-get areas would mean the most difficult search environments.

Subjects found alive having no memory of the disappearance, or giving an account that sounds incorrect, confused, or outright fantastical One of the main reasons the missing 411 books are so expensive is perhaps the nature of the information being sold in these books and how readers globally are constantly seeking truth in every unexplainable incident. Therefore, it would make sense that one should overprice such information. Here are reasons why the missing 411 books are so expensive. However, that leaves a number of seemingly unnecessary attributes without any apparent logic behind why they should make someone a target or more likely to get lost mysteriously. These are mainly the German connection, the religion connection, and the military connection, or a combination of two or all three. This invokes a motivation or mentality that either has something to do with genetics or culture, or a specific grudge.a b Polich, Kyle (August 2017). "An Investigation of the Missing411 Conspiracy". Skeptical Inquirer. 41 (4). Archived from the original on July 5, 2021 . Retrieved July 5, 2021– via 54-58. {{ cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown ( link) Right off the bat, it is important to distinguish coincidence from correlation. When Paulides subtitled one of his book A Sobering Coincidence, I’m pretty sure that he was talking about correlations — elements of the cases repeating in multiple cases. Coincidence is not the fact that something keeps repeating or happening in similar ways, it is a remarkable concurrence of events or circumstances without apparent causal connection. An isolated concurrence so unlikely that it’s suspicious by itself. And sure, tests have to be named something and there is a limited number of letters in the alphabet. Granted, Elisa Lam is a rare name, so it’s a case of a rare name of a test that is the same as a human name, which was the same as a rare name of a person who died unusually, while the test was being used at the time and place where they died. That’s roughly a bit odd to the fourth power. The unusual death following a plot of a movie, an unusual plot, moves this coincidence to about a bit odd to the sixth power. How odd is enough? The sooner they are aware of the situation, the better their chances of finding the missing person. If a person disappeared from a place like a pub, then the perpetrators were either lying in wait on the location, possibly cooperating with whoever is operating the establishment, or they were again following the target person beforehand and waited for him to go to a social event. The reason why to wait for that could be that it is much less suspicious for a person to disappear while out drinking at night in the city than if they just left their house for no reason in the middle of the night. In any case, since many of the missing in cities were students, maybe they were targeted at school.

For this reason alone, this appears to be a strong profile point. Given that brain damage is almost never involved even in the cases where the Missing 411 subjects were found dead, there’s no good explanation for high incidence of amnesia. Getting lost in a forest certainly can be a traumatic event, but exhaustion, dehydration, or hypothermia could account for hallucinations, skewed perception, or irrational behavior, but again, not so much for amnesia. It’s too bad that the history of these names isn’t particularly well documented in the Americas, but using common sense, one would use such names for places where bad things happen, where people die or go missing, where they feel bad, or at least for remote, haunting areas. Much like it is with Dave’s trust in the ability of searchers to conduct proper searches, Dave also doesn’t question the ability of canines to find scent. I’m personally not an expert on animal behavior, but as I was told by a biochemist, nothing in biology is 100%. Dogs aren’t machines, which inevitably means they must have some sort of rate of error, some better and worse days, while scent can be affected by environmental conditions. If you go missing in Alaska, your chances of being found are unfortunately lower than in other parts of the country. Why Do So Many Hikers Go Missing? However, he says the field of suspects is narrowing and urges the readers to get out of their comfort zones and try to put the pieces together. Why Are the Missing 411 Books So Expensive?Therefore, people are willing to pay top dollar for the first edition of Missing 411 books to avoid reading contaminated information in the future. 3. Different Prices From Vendors According to the National Crime Information Center, there are over 600,000 missing persons reports filed every year in the United States. They may run away from home, take a trip without telling anyone, or get lost while hiking or camping. There has been no proof or evidence that wild people live in National Parks. Every now and then, someone reports seeing a feral person in a remote area of a park, but these sightings are unconfirmed and there is no concrete evidence that feral people actually exist. Missing 411-North America and Beyond: Stories of people who have disappeared in remote locations of North America and five other countries.

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