1960s Unexplained Events
The counterculture decade brought Mothman to Point Pleasant, the first alien abduction reports to the mainstream, and a government that was secretly dosing its own citizens with LSD. The 1960s were stranger than fiction.

The Goatman of Lake Worth: Texas Terror on Greer Island
Half-man, half-goat creature terrorized Fort Worth couples in summer 1969. Multiple witnesses reported attacks, tire throwing, and encounters with the beast.

The Kecksburg Acorn: Pennsylvania's UFO Cover-Up
Mysterious acorn-shaped object crashes in Pennsylvania woods. Military cordons area, removes unknown craft under cover of darkness.

The Hollow Moon: Earth's Artificial Satellite
Evidence suggests Earth's Moon may be an artificial hollow structure rather than a natural celestial body.

The Hill Abduction: America's First Reported UFO Kidnapping
Interracial couple claims three-hour memory gap during White Mountains drive, later recalls alien medical examination under hypnosis.

The Zodiac Killer: America's Most Elusive Serial Predator
Unidentified serial killer terrorized Northern California, 1968-1969. Sent cryptic ciphers to newspapers, claimed 37 victims, never caught.

The Patterson-Gimlin Film: America's Most Famous Cryptid Evidence
Two cowboys captured 59 seconds of film showing an alleged Bigfoot creature walking through a clearing. The footage remains hotly debated after 55+ years.

The Mothman of Point Pleasant
For thirteen months between November 1966 and December 1967, over 100 residents of Point Pleasant, West Virginia reported encounters with a seven-foot-tall winged humanoid with glowing red eyes. The sightings abruptly ceased after the catastrophic Silver Bridge collapse killed 46 people, forever linking the creature to one of America's deadliest infrastructure disasters.

Missing 411: The National Park Vanishings
Since 2012, former police detective David Paulides has documented over 1,700 unexplained disappearances in North American wilderness areas. Victims vanish without trace, often within sight of companions, leaving behind patterns that defy conventional explanation—and a National Park Service that claims it keeps no centralized record of the missing.