Though many of life’s great mysteries remain unsolved, there are some lesser known ones that also have stumped researchers for centuries. While grand enigmas such as Egypt’s great pyramids, Stonehenge, the Shroud of Turin and the downfall of Rome have garnered widespread interest, here are some perennial riddles that remain just as puzzling. –Tuan C. Nguyen
Rongorongo
Considered the other “Easter Island mystery,” Rongorongo is the hieroglyphic script used by the region’s early inhabitants. While no other neighboring oceanic people possessed a written language, Rongorongo appeared mysteriously in the 1700s. The language was lost though—along with the best hopes for deciphering it—after early European colonizers banned it because of its ties to the islanders’ pagan roots.
Lost City of Helike
Greek writer Pausanias gave an account of how, in one night, a crushing earthquake destroyed the city of Helike, followed by a massive tsunami that swept away what remained of the once-flourishing metropolis. The Achaean league capital was a worship center devoted to earth shaker and God of the sea, Poseidon. No trace of the legendary society existed outside of ancient Greek texts until 1861 when an archeologist found Helike loot—a bronze coin with the unmistakable head of Poseidon. In 2001, a pair of archeologists located the ruins of Helike beneath mud and gravel and is currently trying to uncover the rise and demise of what some consider the “real” Atlantis.
The Bog Bodies
Even CSIÂ’s best efforts wouldnÂ’t go very far in solving the mystery of the bog bodies. So far, there have been hundreds of corpses, mostly from the iron age, discovered buried around the northern wetlands of Europe. Many of these amazingly well-preserved bodies, some dating back 2,000 years back, exhibit tell-tale signs of torture and medieval foul play. Such gruesome clues have some researchers suspecting that they were victims of an ancient practice of ritual sacrifice.
Fall of the Minoans
While many historians have figuring out what caused the collapse of the Roman Empire pretty high up on their to-do lists, the fall of the Minoan empire has proved just as puzzling. Three and a half millenniums ago, life on the island of Crete—which boasted a mythical King and his man-eating beast—was disrupted by a volcanic eruption at neighboring Thera Island. Clay tablets found by archeologists showed that instead of folding, Minoans carried on for another 50 years before finally packing it in. Theories of what finally did them in range from subsequent volcanic ash cover that devastated harvests to a weakened society left vulnerable to an eventual Greek takeover.
The Carnac Stones
If erecting Stonehenge seemed to have been a tremendous groan, think about how backbreaking it must have been for builders of the Carnac stones. On the coast of Brittany in northeastern France, are over 3,000 megalithic standing stones arranged in perfect lines and spread out over 12 kilometers. The local myth about the stones is that they were all part of a Roman Legion that the wizard Merlin turned into stone. A more rational stab at an explanation, by a researcher who studied the stones for over 30 years, purported that the stones are likely an elaborate earthquake detector. The identity of the Neolithic people who built them is unknown.[/b]