The claims
Each entry pairs a reported miracle with the documentary record and an honest, confidence-labeled estimate of how likely it is that no natural explanation accounts for it.
Each entry pairs a reported miracle with the documentary record and an honest, confidence-labeled estimate of how likely it is that no natural explanation accounts for it.
2 claims
A 52-year-old Sherpa guide vanished near Everest's Yellow Band on May 29, 2026, after his bottled oxygen ran out; he descended three abandoned camps alone, spent roughly two and a half days trapped in a crevasse living on a handful of food and chewed ice, climbed out when an icefall collapse wedged a block into the fissure, and was found on June 4 by a garbage-collection crew, crawling toward Base Camp while his family had begun funeral rites.
Naturally possible — was the timing more than coincidence?
A 52-year-old Sherpa guide vanished near Everest's Yellow Band on May 29, 2026, after his bottled oxygen ran out; he descended three abandoned camps alone, spent roughly two and a half days trapped in a crevasse living on a handful of food and chewed ice, climbed out when an icefall collapse wedged a block into the fissure, and was found on June 4 by a garbage-collection crew, crawling toward Base Camp while his family had begun funeral rites.
On September 21, 1995, Hindu devotees worldwide reported that statues of Ganesha and other deities were drinking milk offered by spoon — a mass phenomenon that lasted roughly 24 hours before stopping as abruptly as it began.
On September 21, 1995, Hindu devotees worldwide reported that statues of Ganesha and other deities were drinking milk offered by spoon — a mass phenomenon that lasted roughly 24 hours before stopping as abruptly as it began.