Maybe that's why ancient peoples wrote about "curses," they were probably aware of people dying after opening old coffins. They probably didn't know it was mold, but they had the right idea.
I disagree. This seems like a rare occurrence considering how often coffins were opened and the corpses/bones reburied. Think of ossuaries like the catacombs of paris.
I agree about how dangerous cracking rotten eggs is. My sister and I would leave eggs in our hayloft in the summer for a couple of weeks then have a war. Believe it or not, those eggs weren't just rotten, they were explosive. There was never any doubt about a hit 😁
if the grave is less than a hundred years old, then this is desecration of a grave, and if the grave is more than 100 years old and none of the relatives of the deceased are alive, this is archeology
To my taste, a grave becomes subject to archeology when nobody who could have known the person is still alive, so let's say 125 years after the death just to be on the safe side. Earlier in specific cases where important questions are to be answered, like WW2 battlefields and warcrimes. Also, grave robbers sell their finds to rich aholes who deprive society of the knowledge that could have been gained. Archeologists put their stuff in a museum.
when you cover a coffin in resin it kinda makes a seal. so no air could escape, so im thinking the combo of stagnet air and the decomposed bodies would have made a deadly airosol
Stagnant air makes sense. Saw a documentary on youtube where a mass tomb was opened up in Egypt, but no one was allowed to enter for several hours just to allow fresh air to enter it.
Deaths of the 12 researchers in the immediate aftermath: One death would be happenstance, two deaths could be a strange coincidence, 3 deaths would be statistical significance, 4 deaths plus the 6 premature additional deaths over the following years is statistical certainty. 10/12 people dying prematurely after a shared experience is caused by that experience.
I'm so happy this channel has narration now. I used to hate that i had to read them & couldn't just listen & multitask. Great decision, love the channel!
I'm a 'historian' (I'm really just interested in history and next year I'm studying history) and just for a little correction: The Prussians and the Teutonic order didn't fight together. In the battle of Grunwald in 1410, and Polish-Lithuanian battles against the Teutonic order in 1440 the only 4 countries that fought was Poland, Lithuania, the Teutonic order and Livonia. (Livonia was more of a support to the Teutonic order and less of a fighter but I still count them) the Prussians didn't emerge as a country until around the 16th century, but as a people they existed way longer than that. Many people say that the Teutonic order is Prussia because the Teutons were the Prussian ancestors. Many people also call some Teutonic cities 'Prussian cities' because it was the minority and language spoken there
A classmate in college told us that her uncle owned a bit of land somewhere in the south of Mexico (she told us where but I don't remember, sorry). He discovered a Mayan child's grave while excavating to put foundations for a house. He opened it and died soon after. It could all be bs, but it's still fascinating.
Are you planning to remaster the "Top Strongest Tornadoes Ever" because of the new data and possibly more accurate estimations of the damage? For example, I've estimated the Hackleburg-Phil Campbell tornado to have a wind speed of 305-310 mph, this is evident from a Below-Ground concrete storm shelter that was unroofed by the tornado. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-3vvlw68KGl8.html In Smithville, MS, I've put the intensity of over 315 mph, everything in its path was gone, homes, trees, forests, and even sections of roads and slabs were damaged or ripped out. The Smithville Funeral Home was almost literally vaporized by the tornado. The very scary part is the fact the Smithville tornado had a forward motion at 63 mph when it tore through the town. This means that the tornado did this kind of damage in less than a second, to 3 seconds in Smithville. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xZ6bN9kz-50.html In Smithville, MS, you only had seconds to survive, and there are also insane survival stories from the Smithville tornado, including Jimmy Cowley inside his truck, and Michele Wardlaw being literally tossed into a storm shelter.
Your videos are sooooo good brother, awesome to learn something new about our grand duke and Poland’s king. And I’m happy I heard it from you first. Great content, keep it up 👌🏻
MOld on its own can be dangerous, and some people are sensitive/allergic to mold. and if you have an immunodeficiency. If all these things lineup, you will most likely die due to the exposure to the mold.
Well, you dont want people robbing tombs and such but when you think about what ancient people done to entomb someone, you be surprised what gets locked away that ancient people didn't think about as being a major significance.
Tombs are apparently as dangerous as opening up old food containers in the refrigerator. If you don't know what's in it anymore, don't open, just discard it. Mold spores are dangerous.
janet lee just sounds like she was trying to make a name for herself, its fine try and debunk something, but you cant say " yea its probably not that" without countering with an argument of why you think its something else, other than "trust me bro im a scientist"
hello mr slav is it possible you can give an accurate explanation of the story "the moon rang like a bell" some people think the moon is hollow some people think the moon is solid but theres iron inside and some people think the moon is man made. its just really interesting to me
I will tell u , Moon 🌜 is habitat of many human like creatures, they exist on dark corner or dark side of moon, This is depicted in Hindu mythology and Many true claims are there , Moon is habitat for many intelligent species as per Hindu books , unfortunately we only explored viable moon , not the dark side , it is both man made and natural 😊
Of course how typical that I'm the ONLY person thinking of the ending of Uncharted 1 because I'm ALWAYS the ONLY person on Earth who remembers any media older than 5 years. Everybody else is saying "The Last of Us" because you are all so are toxicly obsessed with only caring about 'new new new' things and not caring anything about old things. Every time something new comes out it overshadows the old stuff and distracts everybody and takes attention away from the old stuff, which is a BAD thing because those old things are still amazing and phenomenal and deserve to be cared about and loved and experienced by everyone in the future generations forever for all of time. Why am I the ONLY person who cares about and enjoys old stuff from the past enough to remember something as old as Uncharted 1, why is nobody else is mentioning it? Just think about it logically from my perspective, WHY else would you all mentioning The Last of Us instead of Uncharted, when Uncharted is the one that clearly makes the most sense here given that the story is more relevant to this video? The Last of Us is less relevant, so how does it make sense to choose it over Uncharted? It must be because you're all too young and don't care enough about past history to remember anything Naughty Dog did before "The Last of Us". To all of you, it is so old it doesn't even exist anymore and nobody will ever care to bring it up and talk about it or pay attention to it ever again except for me, none of you would ever be caught dead spending your time playing or talking about a game that is so old, I'm the only person on Earth with a brain who cares about all media, games, tv shows, books, movies and music from all generations equally. Not just media but technology and culture and everything else in hiatory as well. I'm the only person that goes around treating old things like they are still relevant and still new and they will never ever become old or irrelevant to me. They will always be just as interesting and enjoyable to me no matter how much time passes, in fact the more time passes the more it increases my love and care for old things and makes me appreciate it even more. No matter how much time passes, I will always forever cherish everything from my past. I do not let my memories fade and do not let my enjoyment of old things be reduced by time. I hate constantly going around the internet every day and seeing everybody only caring about new stuff and barely anyone caring about old stuff that I still care about the same as I did when it was still new. The lack of care for the past and historical preservation in society makes me sick. I am digusted and hate this toxic mental plague on society.