Embed

Following in the Tracks of the Dyatlov Group

Get to the truth of the Dyatlov Pass incident

On 23 January 1959, a group of Soviet students led by Igor Dyatlov set off on a hiking trip across the snowy Ural Mountains, recording the trip in their journals. Ten days later, they would make their last diary entries before dying in mysterious circumstances in what is now known as the Dyatlov Pass incident. It still baffles investigators and provokes some outlandish speculation. 

© Dyatlov Group Memorial Fund

Seven men and two women in their 20s, all experienced hikers, were found dead in an area known, in the local Mansi language, as ‘Deadly Mountain’. The students’ bodies were discovered hundreds of metres apart and from their tent, which had been slit open from inside. All were barefoot and either partially dressed or wearing someone else’s clothes. The scene suggested to investigators that they had fled in panic.

© Dyatlov Group Memorial Fund

While some were found to have died from hypothermia, others had extensive injuries, including fractured ribs, broken skulls and heavy bleeding. One woman was missing her tongue; another still had a finger in his mouth after biting it off. An inquest at the time concluded that the hikers had been killed by, “unknown compelling natural force,” ruling out criminal foul play. For decades, the mysterious case of the Dyatlov Pass incident was kept secret, ostensibly to prevent panic, but it did raise countless questions and inspire dozens of conspiracy theories. 

© Dyatlov Group Memorial Fund

What forced a group of half-naked young people to abandon their camp and run out into the cold? Why did they split up to be found in groups of two and three? What might have caused their brutal injuries? Could an argument have erupted between the group members? Maybe they stumbled upon escaped prisoners or hostile Mansi tribesmen? Perhaps they saw something they shouldn't have such as top-secret military activity, aliens or even something supernatural?

Sixty years later, Ruptly correspondent, Peter Scott, travels to the Dyatlov Pass posthumously named after the group leader, as a new investigation of the tragedy opens. The Ruptly film is part of the interactive project, Dyatlov Group’s Journal, Last Page. The project draws on members’ notes and photographs, as well a forensic expert and local Mansi people to build a picture of what might have befallen the doomed expedition. The truth must be out there, but will they find it?

© dyatlov.ruptly.tv

Check out Ruptly’s interactive website, available in Russian, English, and Spanish. You can find more of the ill-fated hikers’ pictures and diary entries on the project’s Instagram page.

Subscribe to get stories the mainstream media ignores: Subscribe RTD's Youtube

WATCH TRAILER
Please rate this film

9.75(4 users)

Published: 12 September 2019 21:38

Duration

23:42

Tags
Watch this film in Russian

don't miss

26:33
Discovering Russia 08 July 2011 00:00

The Zone. Creepiest and most haunted places in Russia

26:33
Meeting with Nature 14 October 2015 00:00

The Permafrost Mystery. Scientists explore giant Yamal Sinkhole

26:33
Meeting with Nature 18 April 2012 00:00

Ice Queen of Kungur. Visit off-limit areas in Russia’s most stunning glacier cave

26:33
Religion 20 January 2012 00:00

Shamans of Siberia. Powerful healers chosen by spirits

26:33
Religion 14 October 2019 00:30

So, You Want to Be a Shaman. A Shamanic rite of passage for beginners in Siberia

26:33
Health 23 January 2019 00:30

Grisi Siknis. Mystery mental illness afflicting girls in Nicaragua

26:33
Religion 26 March 2020 19:15

Voodoo Spirits of Haiti. Voodoo: a cruel cult or a cultural identity?

26:33
History 06 April 2022 12:20

Miracle Monk. Mystery and science behind the incorruptible body of the Buddhist lama

26:33
Traditions 18 January 2023 12:00

Witch-hunt in Congo. Congolese women blamed for witchcraft and killed without trial

26:33
Religion 11 June 2012 00:00

Searching for a Miracle. The mystery of the incorruptible Buddhist Lama Itigelov

26:33
Sport 24 April 2012 00:00

Peculiar winter sports

26:33
Travel and Adventure 26 December 2011 00:00

Eastern Sayan: Beyond the Taiga

26:33
Traditions 25 February 2013 00:00

Train to New Year. Celebrate the New Year in style on Moscow-St. Petersburg overnight train

26:33
Discovering Russia 11 March 2013 00:00

Polar nights & Northern lights

26:33
Travel and Adventure 18 March 2013 00:00

Surviving the cold

26:33
Discovering Russia 22 April 2013 00:00

Murmansk

26:33
Discovering Russia 01 July 2013 00:00

The pole of cold. Punishing road race to world’s coldest place in Yakutia

26:33
Travel and Adventure 05 June 2015 00:00

Maasai: From Sand to Snow. Kenyan tribesmen visit Moscow

26:33
Discovering Russia 30 May 2016 00:00

My Crazy Russian Vlog. Peter Scott explores weird and wonderful Russian pastimes

26:33
Meeting with Nature 09 April 2021 17:00

Aurora Hunters. Chasing nature’s fantastic light shows

VIEWER’S CHOICE: 1,000,000 VIEWS AND MORE

VIEW ALL