8 world-famous "time travel" cases without explanation
Time machines have not appeared yet, but there are still mysterious cases of "time travel". Until now, science has not been able to give any suitable reasons to explain the mysterious cases below. Scientists can only use the concept of "time travel" to explain these phenomena.

Time machines have not appeared yet, but there are still mysterious cases of "time travel". Until now, science has not been able to give any suitable reasons to explain the mysterious cases below. Scientists can only use the concept of "time travel" to explain these phenomena.
Timeless mysteries that have not been solved
1. The hotel disappeared
2. The Ghost of Petit Trianon Castle
3. The mysterious clock
4. The Flight of Victor Goddard
5. Time Traveler
6. Rudolph Fentz's Accident
7. CDs from the 1800s
8. The first mobile phone?
Top 10 Most Tough Mysteries of All Time
10 unsolved mysteries of the world
1. The hotel disappeared
One of the most famous cases occurred in October 1979, and was featured in the ITV show “Strange but True?” . It is also discussed in the “time slip” topic on Wikipedia.

The Simpsons British Couple and the Gisbys
The Simpsons and the Gisbys drive through France on their way to a vacation in Spain. They spend the night in a boutique hotel. On their way back, they decide to stop at the same hotel, but it seems to have disappeared without a trace, and they can't find it. Even the photos they took during their stay are gone.
2. The Ghost of Petit Trianon Castle
The incident took place on August 10, 1901 in the garden of the Petit Trianon castle , a small castle located on the grounds of the Versailles castle , France. This is also the story of two women named Charlotte Anne Moberly (1846–1937) and Eleanor Jourdain (1863–1924).

Moberly (left) and Jourdain (right) (Photo: NTDTV)
During their visit to Versailles , Moberly and Jourdain went to the Petit Trianon castle, where they experienced a situation known as a ' Time Slip '. Here, they met the late Queen Marie Antoinette of France and many figures from the French Revolution (1789–1799).

Petit Trianon Castle, where the strange incident occurred in 1901 (Photo: Myrabella / Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY-SA-3.0 & GFDL)
Recounting his strange experiences, Moberly wrote: “Everything suddenly became unnatural, and therefore unpleasant; even the trees seemed flat and lifeless, like wood on a carpet. There were no effects of light and shade, and no wind stirred the canopy.”
3. The mysterious clock
In December 2008, in Shangsi County, southern China, Chinese archaeologists were surprised to discover a watch engraved with the word " Swiss" in a 400-year-old coffin from the Ming Dynasty. The watch was made of metal, and the hour and minute hands stopped at 10:06. Strangely, the watch had never appeared in the Qing Dynasty, an expert said.

Mysterious clock in Ming Dynasty coffin
4. The Flight of Victor Goddard
Victor Goddard (1897-1987) was a senior commander in the Royal Air Force during World War II. In 1935, while flying his plane, he encountered a sudden storm and became lost at an abandoned airport in Edinburgh.
At first he almost lost control, but when he regained his composure and looked down, he was amazed to see that the airport had been completely renovated. Goddard saw strange-looking planes and the royal army working busily in their blue uniforms. When he returned, he recounted his strange experiences, but there was no sign of the strange airport. Four years later, Goddard encountered the same familiar scene again.

Victor Goddard
5. Time Traveler
The 1941 photo became famous because of the strange man in it. The man in the photo is wearing a T-shirt and sunglasses, dressed like a modern man, completely different from the style of the 1940s. The photo was named “ Time Traveling Hipster” , once kept at the Bralorne Pioneer Museum and caused much debate about the strange character in this photo.

6. Rudolph Fentz's Accident
The incident happened one evening in mid-June 1950. At around 11 p.m., commuters in New York’s Times Square noticed a man in his 30s, dressed in a late 19th-century style. No one knew how he got there. He himself seemed confused as he stood in the middle of the intersection. Then he was suddenly hit by a taxi and died on the spot.

When the authorities examined the body, they found several strange objects in his pockets. They included a brass plate bearing the name of a tavern, a name unknown to anyone, not even the older people in the city; about $70 in old currency; a business card bearing the name of Rudolph Fentz with an address on Fifth Avenue; and a letter from Philadelphia to that address dated June 1876. None of these items showed any signs of age.
An investigation was launched, and Rudolph Fentz’s daughter-in-law, who lived in Florida, was found. She told him that her father-in-law had mysteriously disappeared in 1876, when he was 29 years old. That evening, he went out for a walk and never returned. After investigators looked up records of the man named Rudolph Fentz who had disappeared in 1876, they were surprised to find that every description, from age, appearance, to clothing, matched the man in Times Square in 1950.
7. CDs from the 1800s
This painting dates back to the 1800s. It shows Joseph Smith presenting the “golden tablets” to eight people around him. He can be seen holding two CD-ROMs, which were not invented until 1980.
7 world-famous unexplained "time travel" cases

8. The first mobile phone?
The world's first mobile phone was officially born in 1973, created by inventors John F. Mitchell and Martin Cooper and named Motorola Dyna Tac. Although very bulky, it was considered a breakthrough in the field of human communication.
This video was recorded in 1928, 45 years before the first mobile phone was invented. But the strange thing is that the woman moving from the right corner of the screen seems to have "owned" one herself.

She holds a small, palm-sized object (which many assume is a mobile phone) and moves it throughout the frame. This is truly a difficult "knot" that challenges any researcher.
If the object above is not a cell phone, then what is it that is being used so similarly?
And if it was indeed a mobile phone, why was it there at that time? Is time travel into the past the only plausible answer to this case?
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