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  1. The Dyatlov Pass incident (Russian: гибель тургруппы Дятлова, romanized: gibel turgruppy Dyatlova, lit. 'Death of the Dyatlov Hiking Group') is an event in which nine Soviet hikers died in the northern Ural Mountains between February 1 and 2, 1959, under uncertain circumstances.

  2. Jan 29, 2021 · Today, the so-called Dyatlov Pass Incident —named after the group’s leader, 23-year-old Igor Dyatlov—is one of Russia’s most enduring mysteries, spawning conspiracy theories as varied as a...

  3. Jan 31, 2024 · The Dyatlov Pass Incident. Months later, after some snow melt, investigators discovered the bodies of the remaining four hikers. They had even more inexplicable injuries. One had a fractured...

  4. Jan 29, 2021 · New research offers a plausible explanation for the Dyatlov Pass Incident, the mysterious 1959 death of nine hikers in the Ural Mountains in what was then the Soviet Union.

  5. Apr 1, 2022 · Hikers on the expedition into the Dyatlov Pass. Nine people disappeared in February 1959, and no one knows exactly what happened to them. By Alan Yuhas. April 1, 2022. A small avalanche on a...

  6. May 17, 2023 · In what has become known as the Dyatlov Pass incident, ten members of the Soviet Union’s Urals Polytechnic Institute in Yekaterinburg—nine students and one sports instructor who fought in World...

  7. May 10, 2021 · The saddle in the mountains which the skiers were heading for but never reached was named the Dyatlov Pass. The victims’ families were left deeply dissatisfied.

  8. Oct 23, 2014 · In January of 1959, 23-year-old Igor Dyatlov led a group of eight young Soviet hikers, comprising seven men and two women and mostly university students, into the Ural Mountains,...

  9. www.bbc.co.uk › news › extraDyatlov Pass - BBC

    Nine bodies were eventually found on a remote mountain with horrific, inexplicable injuries. Some were semi-clothed, two had missing eyes, and one’s tongue was missing. The Dyatlov Pass mystery...

  10. Jan 28, 2021 · A sixty-year-old mystery from Soviet Russia could be explained by snow science. When nine students died on a hiking trip in the Ural Mountains in 1959 it sparked sixty years of controversy and ...

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