Quiet Files

Meschelle

The Quiet Files is a calm, careful retelling of the world's most stubborn historical mysteries — disappearances, codes, ghost ships, locked-room cases. One episode, one story, ten to fifteen minutes. No theatrics, no graphic content, no manufactured cliffhangers. Just what's documented, what isn't, and the question you're left with. Episodes focus on cases from the 1850s through the 1960s — an era rich with real reporting, archive records, and the kind of mysteries that lived in newspapers before they lived in podcasts. Some have been picked clean by other shows. Most have not.

  1. The WOW! Signal

    6월 28일

    The WOW! Signal

    On the fifteenth of August, 1977, a radio telescope at Ohio State University picked up a seventy-two-second signal from the constellation Sagittarius. It was thirty times stronger than the surrounding background noise. It came in at the exact frequency that radio astronomers had agreed, decades earlier, was the most likely place an intelligent civilization would broadcast — the hydrogen line, 1420 megahertz, the "water hole."Three days later, the astronomer reviewing the printout circled the alphanumeric sequence "6EQUJ5" with a red pen and wrote, in the margin, the word that has named the signal ever since: Wow!This is the story of the Wow! Signal. The Big Ear telescope that was demolished in 1998. The frequency that the signal came in on, and why that mattered. The hundreds of follow-up scans that have never picked it up again. The 2016 comet hypothesis — and why most astronomers don't accept it. And the question that radio astronomers have been quietly arguing about for forty-eight years: was that signal something, or was it nothing?Episode Twenty of The Quiet Files.Sources: Jerry R. Ehman, "Wow!" — A Tantalizing Candidate (Ohio State University Radio Observatory archive, 1977); subsequent SETI reobservation campaigns, 1977 onward; Antonio Paris, Hydrogen Clouds from Comets 266P/Christensen and 335P/Gibbs as a Plausible Source of the "Wow!" Signal (Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences, 2016); follow-up analysis by Robert Dixon and others rejecting the comet hypothesis.

    9분
  2. Saint Exupery's Last Flight

    6월 21일

    Saint Exupery's Last Flight

    On the thirty-first of July, 1944, the author of The Little Prince — a forty-four-year-old French reconnaissance pilot named Antoine de Saint-Exupéry — took off from an airfield on Corsica in a Lockheed P-38 Lightning, bound for a routine photographic mission over occupied France. His chronic injuries from previous crashes meant he could no longer climb into his own cockpit without help; two crewmen had to lift him in. He never returned. For fifty-four years, no one knew what had happened to him. No wreckage. No body. No German record of the engagement. Then in 1998, a fisherman off the coast of Marseille pulled up a silver identity bracelet engraved with his name. Two years later, his P-38 was found on the seabed five miles offshore. In 2003 the serial number was confirmed. In 2008, a former Luftwaffe pilot came forward to say he had been the one who shot the aircraft down — and that he had loved Saint-Exupéry's books since he was a boy. This is the story of his final flight. The injuries that should have grounded him. The darkening letters he wrote in the weeks before. The Luftwaffe pilot's claim, and the German squadron records that neither confirm nor refute it. And the unanswered question of whether he was shot down — or chose not to come back. Episode Sixteen of The Quiet Files. Sources: Free French Air Force squadron records, July 1944; Luc Vanrell & Lino von Gartzen, Saint-Exupéry, l'ultime secret (2008); Stacy Schiff, Saint-Exupéry: A Biography (1994); Horst Rippert interview (Stern magazine, March 2008); confirmed wreckage analysis by French Department of Underwater and Submarine Archaeological Research, 2003.

    9분
  3. The Tunguska Event

    6월 14일

    The Tunguska Event

    On the morning of the thirtieth of June, 1908, the sky above central Siberia tore open. An explosion equivalent to ten to fifteen megatons of TNT — a thousand times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima — knocked down eighty million trees over an area larger than the city of London. The shockwave circled the Earth twice. For nights afterward, the skies above Europe and Asia remained bright enough to read a newspaper at midnight. When Soviet scientists finally reached the epicenter, nineteen years later, they expected to find a crater. There was no crater. There were no meteorite fragments. This is the story of the Tunguska event — the largest impact event in recorded human history. The nomadic Evenki herders who watched the sky split. The 1927 expedition that found a radial pattern of flattened trees stretching to the horizon, and a center that had no hole. The theories that have come and gone — comet, asteroid, antimatter, black hole, alien spacecraft. And the question that astronomers still cannot definitively answer: what hit the Earth that morning, and how lucky were we that it landed where it did? Episode Fourteen of The Quiet Files. Sources: Leonid Kulik expedition reports, 1927–1939 (Russian Academy of Sciences); Christopher F. Chyba et al., The 1908 Tunguska Explosion: Atmospheric Disruption of a Stony Asteroid (Nature, 1993); Gasperini, Cocchi & Stanghellini, Lake Cheko and the Tunguska Event (2007 onward).

    10분

소개

The Quiet Files is a calm, careful retelling of the world's most stubborn historical mysteries — disappearances, codes, ghost ships, locked-room cases. One episode, one story, ten to fifteen minutes. No theatrics, no graphic content, no manufactured cliffhangers. Just what's documented, what isn't, and the question you're left with. Episodes focus on cases from the 1850s through the 1960s — an era rich with real reporting, archive records, and the kind of mysteries that lived in newspapers before they lived in podcasts. Some have been picked clean by other shows. Most have not.