While recreational readers will appreciate the drama and poignancy of Eichar's solid depiction of this truly eerie and enduring mystery, pickier researchers may question the lack of bibliography or notes to indicate exact sources, which makes the accuracy of his re-creation of certain events difficult to judge. Mountain of the Dead The Dyatlov Pass Incident By: Keith McCloskey Narrated by: Curt Bonnem Length: 6 hrs and 52 mins 4.1 (13 ratings) Try for 0. Through his research into the many bizarre and seemingly unexplainable aspects of the tragedy, he attempts to rule out previously suggested causes such as an avalanche, an attack by a native tribe, Soviet weapons testing, and even aliens. The author ably pieces together a detailed chronicle of this haunting incident, using official case files, interviews, journals, and other evidence. Eichar, a television documentary producer, investigates the mysterious events leading to the untimely deaths of these experienced outdoor adventurers, whose frozen bodies were found later by search parties, some with severe injuries and one lacking a tongue. In 1959, nine young Russians set off on a doomed ski trip in the wintry Ural Mountains, never to return. The Dyatlov Pass incident resulted in nine unsolved, mysterious deaths Keith McCloskey attempts to decipher the bizzare events that led up to that night and the subsequent aftermathIn January 1959, 10 experienced young skiers set out to travel to a mountain named Mount Otorten in the far north of Russia.
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