I'm not sure the model of assuming it was an avalanche and those at the top knew it was , covered it up. That's not what's reported.
Dear Ziljoe! Unfortunately, I am unable to write here regularly, but allow me to comment on what you have written here… 1. Regarding the content (by the title) of the topic. Based on my own numerous on-site investigations, I must state unequivocally that in no local place where the events occurred could there have been any avalanches, cornice collapses, or anything of that sort for physical reasons. There are simply no conditions for this. All discussions on forums, in the press, and elsewhere are fabrications by those who have not been there and cannot even imagine the conditions even approximately.
2. In order to hide something, one must have a very significant reason. Can you (or anyone else on this forum) point to such a significant reason that it should be hidden for more than 65 years, especially considering that many more significant events have been published during this time? Perhaps it is logical to assume that there is nothing to hide, because there is nothing special?
The tent is found empty on the , 26 th , that's the first part of something being wrong and reviewing the need for an investigation. That has its own merit in seriousness and concern. Less than 24 hours later , 4 bodies are discovered . It would seem that this is written or communicated at least a day later than the the 26th of February . It can't be written before the 26th of February, it may be a wrong date by the author or the thought that it's appropriate to say the case started on the 26th in hindsight of finding the tent.
Let's clarify these points based on current legislation and the practice of investigating such criminal cases at the time…
1. As my old friend, who is a senior employee of one of the federal archives, told me, on the cover of a completed case, in the 'start' and 'end' fields, the law requires the dates of the earliest (or latest) document contained therein to be entered, even if it is incorrect.
If a date error is discovered that does not affect the events themselves, a
very lengthy and costly procedure is required to correct the date in the document. This procedure is not used in 99% of cases because it does not affect the results of the investigation.
2. A criminal case can be opened based on the fact of the event or by the decision of a prosecutor who has information about the event. Therefore, it does not matter when the case was opened: 26 or 28 February. Prosecutor Tempalov knew that the group had gone missing in his jurisdiction even before that. Therefore, the date he opened the case is his prerogative. No one can change this if the law is followed. In this case, the case was opened based on the discovery of the bodies when the prosecutor confirmed it himself.
The chronological order of what is in the text fits with what is being written about. I would expect errors and contradictions in a case to a certain degree as that's the nature of files and it is the best source of information we have. We can't dismiss the case files because of a difference in a days documented date? By two separate authors .
You are absolutely right. I provided the justification for this in the text above. Whoever writes what, everything must be done according to the law in force at the time. One must also consider the practice of conducting such investigations at that time. This adds to the understanding of what constitutes 'disagreements'. The attempt to 'correct' what happened on the principle of 'it should have been this way' is nothing more than fantasy. 'History does not tolerate the subjunctive.' (с)
It could be the other way round regarding Ivanov's article. The publication is being used to sell . I doubt that lvanov even said half those things. The article is full of mistakes ,and , to put it politely, full of sensationalism. If !Ivanov knew something he could just say it but it's obvious that he didn't or his name is being used.
You are also completely right about this. One must take into account the time when Ivanov wrote his article (and many letters to the press and authorities). It was a time of complete recklessness in judgments, when many wanted to blame the past and align themselves with the 'new times'. Therefore, I do not believe that what Ivanov wrote was untrue; he simply 'shifted the emphasis' in a way that was convenient and 'pleasing' to the authorities of that time.
The case is as many , "unknown" . Over whelming force is the basic answer , it could be avalanche, crashed rocket , hurricane, infrasound but the truth is the investigation didn't find out what happened, not because it was covered up.
Yes, you are right that the reasons were not really explained because there was not enough knowledge at the time. I can clarify a lot here as a specialist in these fields of knowledge.
1.
Avalanche. I managed to conduct extensive on-site research regarding the snow conditions at the tent location and the surrounding area. If you recall our correspondence with Alexander Puzrin (professor at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)) after he published an article on the 'Dyatlov Pass avalanche' in 2021, I wrote to him that there is a location not far from the tent site where the conditions for an avalanche are much greater than at the actual event site (the tent). Interestingly, a year later, there was a complex snow situation, and a landslide occurred exactly in the place I had pointed out, about 700 metres from the tent site. However, at the site where the tent was in 1959, there were no movements.
It's roughly the same as blaming a car driver for hitting a pedestrian if another car, with a different driver, hit a person on the adjoining street.
2.
War Missile. If we stick to what actually happened, rather than the fantasies of amateurs, there were no missiles at that time and on that day that could have somehow reached the pass. I am a specialist in this field and can examine any fantasies in detail. They have absolutely no basis.
3.
Hurricane. There are no wind speeds in nature that can carry a person far in any condition. This has been tested in practice at speeds up to 50 m/s (2.23 mph or kt). At such speeds, a person is knocked down onto the snow and may be dragged to the nearest obstacle (snow drift, rock, tree, etc.), and then pressed down without moving. The distance can be up to 10–15 m (30–40 ft), but no more… These are rather fantasies that have existed since the 1959 searches. They arose because the search participants at the time could not explain the reasons for leaving the tent…
4. I will not say anything about
infrasound (neither - 'yes', nor - 'no') because almost none of the forum readers have enough knowledge to competently judge this physical phenomenon. As a result, many constantly repeat various myths and fakes, completely misunderstanding the physics and nature of the phenomenon.