One of America’s most famous mysteries is the disappearance of Amelia Earhart. Will it and these other mysteries ever be solved?
Amelia Earhart
One of America’s most famous mysteries is the disappearance of Amelia Earhart. The American aviator, fondly known as “Lady Lindy,” became the first woman (and second person after Charles Lindbergh) to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. And she was determined to fly around the world. In July 1937, on her second attempt to become the first pilot ever to circumnavigate the globe, she disappeared somewhere over the Pacific without a trace.
The Lizzie Borden murders
On Aug. 4, 1892, Andrew and Abby Borden were found in their Massachusetts home hacked to death by an ax. Lizzie, their daughter, was arrested on circumstantial evidence and tried for the murders. She was acquitted in 1893. Afterward, she inherited a significant portion of her father’s estate, and she bought a new home with her sister Emma. She continued to live in Fall River until her death on June 1, 1927. What ever happened that day, in that house, went to the grave with Lizzie.
The Roswell incident
In 1947, about 75 miles from Roswell, N.M., a rancher found what appeared to be wreckage made of a strange metal. Although Air Force officials said it was a crashed weather balloon, and later, a top-secret atomic espionage project, it is still believed by many to be the remains of a UFO. Today people still come from all over to visit the site to find their own evidence, and many still insist the government and the military are covering up the truth.
JFK assassination and Lee Harvey Oswald slaying
Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President John F. Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963. After his arrest, in the basement of the Dallas police station, Oswald was shot to death by Jack Ruby. Some still believe Oswald or Ruby was part of a larger conspiracy, either domestic or international. Although the official Warren Commission report found this to be false, it fails to silence conspiracy theories surrounding the event.
The abandoned Mary Celeste
The Mary Celeste was an American merchant ship. In November 1872, the ship left New York harbor en route to Genoa, Italy, never to arrive. In December of that year it was found off the coast of Portugal’s Azores Islands. The ship had been abandoned of all crew and a single lifeboat. The mystery deepens: The ship has all its rations, alcohol provisions were unopened, and the captain’s and crew’s personal belongings were undisturbed. There have been many theories for the maritime mystery, but it remains unsolved.
The JonBenét Ramsey murder
On Dec. 26, 1996, 6-year-old JonBenét Ramsey was found dead in her Boulder, Colo., home. On that morning her parents, John and Patricia, called police after a ransom note was found and the child was missing. Later that afternoon JonBenét was found dead in their basement. She had been sexually assaulted and strangled and had a fractured skull. With John and Patricia appearing on numerous TV programs and interviews declaring their innocence, the still-unsolved murder led to one of the most publicized police investigations of the 1990s.
The Zodiac Killer
In the 1960s and early 1970s northern California was terrorized by a series of grisly murders from the self-proclaimed Zodiac. Letters from the killer were sent to area newspapers with threats, demands and information only the killer would have known. Then in 1974, they abruptly ended. The Zodiac Killer was directly linked to at least five murders, but he hinted he had killed at least 37 victims. For more than five decades the case has remained open, with no sign of a resolution.
The Great Serpent Mound
Great Serpent Mound in Ohio is a mound in the shape of a snake with a curled tail nearly 1,300 feet long. Experts agree it was built by pre-Columbian natives, but even with radiocarbon dating no one can pinpoint the age or the tribe. According to ohiohistory.org, archaeologist Frederic Ward Putnam excavated the sight in the late 19th century, but he found no artifacts in the serpent that might allow archaeologists to assign it to a particular culture. To this date no one knows if the mound was used for astronomical reasons or even as a large tomb.
Sailing stones of Death Valley
Death Valley is known worldwide as being one of the hottest places on Earth, but many don’t know about Racetrack Playa. Littered across the flat, dry lake bed are hundreds of rocks ranging in shapes and sizes, some weighing 700 pounds. Nothing unusual about that, except that they move. Although no one has seen them move with their own two eyes, the tracks behind the stones show periodic changes in their location. Some believe it could be a weather-related event such as ice, wind or rain, but either way it is one strange mystery.
D.B. Cooper
On Nov. 24, 1971, Dan Cooper bought a one-way plane ticket from Portland, Ore., to Seattle, Wash. During the flight he gave a flight attendant a note saying he had a bomb and demanded $200,000 and four parachutes. When the flight landed in Seattle, the crew brought onboard the money and parachutes. After the other passengers exited the plane, it took off again heading south. Somewhere between Seattle and Reno, Nev., Cooper jumped with the money wearing a suit, a raincoat and sunglasses, never to be seen again.
The Levelland event
During the 1950s and '60s, there were reports of hundreds of UFO or flying saucer sightings all over the U.S. But one of the most unusual and famous sightings happened in Levelland, Texas. On Nov. 2, 1957, more than 20 people from the town reported seeing strange lights and cigar-shaped objects in the sky. What was more mysterious about these sightings was that car engines and lights would reportedly go out when the objects flew overhead. The Air Force said at the time that it was an electrical storm, even though there were no storms in that area that night.
The Texas Killing Fields
The Texas Killing Fields are in a 50-mile stretch that runs along Interstate 45, between Houston and Galveston, and has become known as the site of some of the most mysterious and puzzling murders in the U.S. Throughout the 1970s the bodies of 30 adolescent and teenage girls were found in abandoned oil fields and marshes. Only a few of the murders have ever been solved, and most likely the rest will never be.
The Roanoke Colony
In 1587 on the banks of North Carolina, 121 colonists led by Englishman John White set up permanent colony on Roanoke Island. Later in the year White would return to England for more supplies, only to return three years later due to England’s war with Spain. Upon entering the village, White found it empty with no trace of its citizens. There were no signs of a struggle and no remains, just the word “Croatoan” carved on a post and the letters “CRO” carved into the trunk of a tree. Today gravestones commemorate the mystery of the lost colony.
Jimmy Hoffa
Jimmy Hoffa was an American labor leader and organizer in the 1930s and 1940s. In 1952 he became the vice president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and eventually the president. During his lifetime he made more than a few enemies, did prison time and was said be mob-connected. In July 1975, he was to meet Mafia leaders about settling a feud. His car was found later in a restaurant parking lot, but he was never seen again and was legally declared dead in 1982.
Bermuda Triangle
The Bermuda Triangle is an expanse of ocean that connects Miami, Bermuda and Puerto Rico to form a triangle. The area covers about 500,000 square miles and has been the subject of strange phenomena as far back as Christopher Columbus. He reported erratic compass readings and fire in the sky that crashed into the sea. Since then, there have been dozens of unexplained events in the triangle, such as a U.S. Navy squadron going missing, as well as other boats and planes vanishing without a trace.
Beale ciphers
The Beale ciphers are a series of three ciphertexts, or encrypted or encoded information, that are rumored to reveal the location of the biggest cache of treasures ever recorded in U.S history. According to bealetreasurestory.com, a group of 30 Virginians, headed by Thomas J. Beale, struck gold and silver in the Rocky Mountains. The treasure was then secretly buried in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Beale wrote three ciphers devised to arrange legacies for their families. The first cipher was the location, the second describes the treasure’s contents, and the third listed the names of Beale’s men. To this day only one of the ciphers has been cracked: the county in Virginia where the treasure is buried. To this day treasure hunters are busy illegally dotting the hillsides with craters looking for the buried gold.

