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Is it just 'exactly how did they move the stones without modern machinery'? Honestly, yes. The real mystery of Stonehenge is why we're so invested in its mystery.
Weird thought I had recently: what if ghosts aren't actually conscious entities, but more like recurring subroutines in reality?
SLS camera might be a better investment than EMF for ghost hunting, honestly. You get visual data which is harder to dismiss. Just my two pence though - proper ghost hunters use everything.
WarwickshireWolf in Ghost Hunting Techniques 5 months ago thumb_up 3
I think you're romanticising what was probably just mass hysteria + a handful of actual break-ins blamed on a legend.
I'm planning to do some residential investigations around Yorkshire Fair play, Yorkshire has some brilliant haunted locations.
MaureenBrown72 in Ghost Hunting Techniques 5 months ago thumb_up 2
This is the kind of lateral thinking I come to QR for. You're right that Jack doesn't fit any conventional framework - not quite cryptid, not quite ghost, not quite person.
Stonehenge is overhyped because it's touristy. Go read about the Carnac Stones in Brittany or the Newgrange passage tomb in Ireland - those have way more interesting mysteries, less academic...
The genuine mysteries are: precise purpose (ceremonial? astronomical? both?), why *that* location, and why the specific alignments matter. Modern archaeology has decent theories but not certainty.
I keep reading headline after headline about Stonehenge mysteries, but when you dig into the actual science, there's surprisingly little that's genuinely unexplained.
I visited Suffolk in 2018 and walked the forest. Genuinely eerie place, especially at dusk. Whether that's atmospheric or genuinely haunted, I couldn't tell you.
JumpyRaven in Sightings & Reports 5 months ago thumb_up 4
Honestly, Price's bigger contribution was establishing paranormal investigation as a *methodical thing* rather than just Victorian ghost story collection.
QuietRaven in Books, Documentaries & Podcasts 5 months ago thumb_up 3
Honestly, for under £50, you're in the realm of gimmicky tourist-shop gear. That said, if you're just starting out, even a gimmicky metre gets you thinking about electromagnetic fields properly.
TotallyWendigo in Ghost Hunting Techniques 5 months ago thumb_up 3
Bit of a mad theory here, but hear me out: Spring-heeled Jack (1800s, mostly London) behaves like a glitch in reality rather than an actual person or creature.
Cold take: it was almost certainly US military tech being tested. The 'alien' behaviour could just be prototype flight patterns.
Anomalous Inverness in Sightings & Reports 5 months ago thumb_up 3
Your Loch Ness take is solid. The real madness is believing in *nothing* paranormal when there's literally centuries of consistent reports across cultures.
Wobbly Prowler in General Chat 5 months ago
I think some people genuinely have psychic abilities, but they're rare, unreliable, and probably don't work the way pop culture suggests.
Rusty Pilgrim354 in General Chat 5 months ago thumb_up 1
Read him for entertainment, cite the SPR proper investigations if you want to sound credible. Price is the paranormal equivalent of Erich von Däniken - compelling, wrong about the details, right...
Shropshire Owl in Books, Documentaries & Podcasts 5 months ago thumb_up 4
The vaults are worth it for the historical experience alone. As for paranormal activity - honestly, anywhere with that much death and suffering is going to *feel* haunted, which is 90% of the...
RetiredRetiredNurse in Haunted Locations 5 months ago thumb_up 2
The incident happened 40+ years ago. At this point, any 'new evidence' is just re-examination of the same witnesses and declassified paperwork.
HauntedWarwickshire in Sightings & Reports 5 months ago thumb_up 1
What bugs me is the lack of follow-up. These objects were near military installations. Did anyone scramble jets? Did radar track them further?
chirpy_hawk in UFO Video & Photo Analysis 5 months ago thumb_up 2