Time Loop

Story #1

In 1979, a private civilian airplane carrying an American folk band returning from a concert suddenly vanished from radar — without a trace. In 1998, the plane was discovered just two meters underground near a local airport. The biggest shock came when, after excavation, the entire crew was found alive. How could they have survived underground for 19 years?

According to the passengers, everything seemed normal until, in the middle of a calm flight, complete darkness engulfed the aircraft for about 15 seconds. The next thing they saw was engineers opening the aircraft doors — they had just been dug up. In reality, 19 years had passed, but for those on board, it had only been a matter of seconds. How is this possible? And why was the plane found in a completely different location from where it disappeared?

Story #2

In 1991, during a church service in the English town of Knowsley, people witnessed an airplane flying low overhead — only for it to vanish moments later. Eyewitnesses confirmed it bore German markings along the fuselage and flew very low before disappearing. Locals still believe it was part of a war movie being filmed. However, according to our sources, no film production was happening at the time.

During World War II, in 1940, the crew of a German bomber led by Captain Johanon Rauav reported an unusual event. Their aircraft was en route to the British Isles, with a mission to destroy military targets near Coventry. However, they never completed their mission. Just before releasing the bombs, the temperature in the aircraft suddenly dropped sharply. Assuming they had flown into bad weather, they continued with the operation.

Before them appeared a small town — strangely untouched by war — and a large factory nearby. According to the crew, the entire scene lasted just over two minutes. They saw no anti-aircraft defenses and decided to drop their bombs, but the bomb release mechanisms inexplicably failed. They turned back, flew again through the clouds, and suddenly found themselves above a village, where the bombs were finally released — onto a cabbage field.

Captain Rau had photographed the entire area.

His photographs are identical to the current surroundings of the town of Knowsley. The factory certainly exists today — but it was built only in 1970. According to Rem Grigorievsky, a physicist from the Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna near Moscow who studies the structure of time, these events suggest that there is a "local temporal discontinuity" near Knowsley — essentially, a time loop.

So what happened to the German pilots? It appears the Luftwaffe bombers briefly entered the future — the 1990s. But because they were inside a distorted temporal structure, they could only see the future, not interact with it. That’s why they couldn’t bomb the Knowsley factory. Once the aircraft exited the disturbed space-time region, all systems returned to normal — and the bombs were released over a cabbage field.