A hilltop crucifixion of children, the biggest gold nugget ever yanked out of the ground, unexpected and deadly tornadoes in February, and a round of golf for space cases.
A hilltop crucifixion of children, the biggest gold nugget ever yanked out of the ground, unexpected and deadly tornadoes in February, and a round of golf for space cases.
They appear in bedrooms at 3 AM. They perform procedures on paralyzed victims. They’ve been documented for decades across cultures worldwide. But what are they really? The answer depends on which theory you believe – and none of them are comforting.
In February 1855, residents of Devon, England awoke to find mysterious cloven hoofprints stretching across 100 miles of countryside, defying all laws of physics.
Lauren Canaday’s heart stopped for 24 minutes — nine minutes past the point where medical science says recovery is impossible — and the woman who came back is not the same one who collapsed.
In 1969, over 250 residents of a quiet Massachusetts county witnessed something that would divide their community for decades.
The Andreasson Affair — a decades-long investigation into one woman’s otherworldly encounters, prophetic visions, and a case that blurred the line between abduction, faith, and something far more unsettling.
As long as there have been people to believe, there have been ghosts.
Millions report journeys beyond clinical death — encounters with realms of light and darkness that challenge everything we think we know about consciousness, mortality, and what waits on the other side
From remote viewing to mind control, the U.S. government’s desperate pursuit of paranormal warfare left a trail of broken minds and shattered ethics
On a snowy February day in 2018, Canadian firefighter Danny Filippidis vanished from a New York ski slope only to mysteriously reappear six days later at a California airport with no memory of how he traveled 2,500 miles across the country.