(https://dyatlovpass.com/resources/340/Dyatlov-pass-snowmobiles.jpg) (https://forum.dyatlovpass.com/index.php?topic=708.0)
It is not very often I come across a novel way to kill the Dyatlov group. Usually the theories give reason for the group to leave the tent, but then they kind of let nature take its course. Igor Povetkin ventures to point out what could inflict the hardest to explain and quickest to die from injuries. In this version Dubinina and Zolotaryov are run over by a snowmobile. Thibeaux-Brignolle head injury, the wound on Kolevatov's head, and the abrasion on Kolmogorova's side and lower back could also have been caused by a snowmobile. The author assures us that on February 1, 1959, nothing fell from the sky to height 1079, no flying saucers, no rocket engines, no comets with meteors. All the evil was done here below, on earth. The theory earned its own board → (https://forum.dyatlovpass.com/index.php?topic=708.0)
I know I am quite new here and should better hold myself back a little bit more. But I am so impressed by Teodora's immense engagement over the years to bring people from all over the world to think about the tragedy and finally find out the truth, that it is hard, to hold back.
Chris
Chris, don't hold back, please.
Firstly - "This case will not get solved by itself", as someone said to me.
Secondly, you are not even aware how deep have I gone.
These are pics from exactly a month to date.
I got in a car accident (with the white Peugeot) and then got into the ambulance and attended an autopsy of someone that fell (or was pushed) from the 5th floor.
On the second photo the young (and beautiful blond) medical examiner is explaining to me how the ribs break in high velocity impact.
(https://dyatlovpass.com/resources/340/car-crash.jpg)
(https://dyatlovpass.com/resources/340/morgue.jpg)
There were no casualties in my car accident. The commonality is that it all happened in the same day and the accident put me on the path of a passing ambulance that stopped and asked if they are needed.
I am gathering information that is amounting to a conclusion that I will publish soon.
So Chris, I haven't stopped thinking about the Dyatlov case for a day in about 8 years now.
My involvement with the case started after another car accident in 2012 (http://distal-humerus.com/).