Livermore Cemetery in Derry Twp., Pa. It's supposed to be haunted, and supposedly 'Night of the Living Dead' was in part filmed there. Just recently I went there and the road was blocked off.
2007-08-31 10:03:09
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Jan Mayen Island. It's a rocky,barren island owned by Norway,about 300 miles north of Iceland and an equal distance from Greenland in the west. It has the only active volcano in the arctic, Mt. Beerenburg. You have to fly there from Tromso on a four-engine Hercules transport and it isn't easy to get permission since the place is essentially off-limits since it's a nuclear-war early warning radar base. It has the most local weather on earth. You can be in one spot,with mild maritime weather,talking on your cell to another guy who's only 2000 ft away and he's in a 100 mph wind. The leading cause of death is being literarily blown out to sea. The weird localization of weather is caused by the fact that on one side of the island is the Gulf Stream and on the other is the Sea of Greenland,incredibly harsh winds blowing right off the Greenland icecap. Cold like you can't imagine. And this collides every day practically with all that warm air from the south. The whole island is virtually always shrouded in fog. The Nazis tried to take it in WWII and on the side of Beerenburg there still sits the wreck of a German Messerschmidt. The pilot is buried right at the foot of the best path leading up to the rim. Other than weather damage,the wreck is basically intact. It's never slid down. It's on the opposite side from the winds, clinging against the mountain. I'd say Jan Mayen is about as strange as anyplace on earth. The volcano rumbles a lot and not long ago belched out enough lava to enlarge the island by 4 acres. So it's going concern. A real growth enterprise.
2007-08-31 10:15:29
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answer #2
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answered by Galahad 7
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When I was growing up in Massachusetts, we used to hunt in a place by the name of Dark Hollow. Don't know how it came by the name but it was weird. It was difficult to get to so the timber had never been harvested and the trees were tall and formed a canapy, giving erie twilight underneath. There were also wild grape vines that grew from the floor up to the canapy and you would walk right into it and sometimes fall down as the vine was so thin you wouldn't even notice it. And of course there were tales of headless people and ghosts. But as many times as I was there I never saw or felt any of the things that were supposed to have happened there. It was just really erie and no one stayed long.
2007-08-31 17:03:12
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answer #3
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answered by MT C 6
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The Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, is a strange place. It is supposed to be one of the most haunted places in America.
2007-08-31 10:08:27
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answer #4
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answered by barbwire 7
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It's either Christmas or Santa Claus GA some little town in South Georgia
2007-08-31 10:03:04
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answer #5
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answered by FallenAngel© 7
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Well last Saturday night I found myself sitting next to 3 kneeling life-size stone angels near a mausoleum in a cemetery at midnight. That was pretty strange.
2007-08-31 10:04:25
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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I was in El Paso Texas driving through and ran into a group of people at a gas station and stayed with them for a week and partied...
2007-08-31 10:30:33
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answer #7
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answered by Ray B 2
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Mississippi
2007-08-31 10:04:51
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answer #8
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answered by ? 3
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The sewers of Rome. Many of them date back over 2000 years and have fascinating artifacts.
2007-08-31 10:04:39
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answer #9
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answered by Steve C 7
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The desert in California, very strange!!!! Not a place for "normal" people.
Oh, but then there was the abandoned psychiatric hospital....
2007-08-31 10:05:41
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answer #10
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answered by crct2004 6
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