These photos of the Dyatlov Pass Incident document the days leading up to the mysterious deaths of nine young hikers — and the investigation into their gruesome deaths.

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Nine Russian Hikers Just Disappeared At The Dyatlov Pass, Where Nine Mysteriously Died In 1959

The Dyatlov Pass Incident: The Mysterious 1959 Tragedy That Left 9 Dead

Russia Reopens Investigation Into The Mysterious 1959 Dyatlov Pass Incident

1 of 34The group piles into a truck from Vizhay to the 41st District in the afternoon of Jan. 26, 1959. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 2 of 34Dubinina, Krivonischenko, Thibeaux-Brignolles, and Slobodin having a good time.

This was one of many photographs recovered from Krivonishchenko’s camera.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 3 of 34Yuri Yudin (center) shares a hug with Lyudmila Dubinina before heading back down the mountain due to an old injury. Little did Yudin know it would be the last time he saw his friends.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 4 of 34The group takes a photo with other hikers from a separate group at the rest stop at the 41st District.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 5 of 34The group is preparing to continue their hike up the Ural Mountains. It’s apparent from this photo the kind of stormy, snowy conditions the hikers had to face.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 6 of 34The hikers take a moment amid the snowy trees to regroup.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 7 of 34Igor Dyatlov, Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle (with the hat), and Rustem Slobodin (behind table) inside a cabin en route up the mountain. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 8 of 34A panoramic view of the Urals with Mount Hoy-Ekva peaking out in the background.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 9 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle smiles as his group gets ready for the next part of their arduous trek.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 10 of 34The Dyatlov group poses together with another group, the Blinovs. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 11 of 34Igor Dyatlov (front) ties his snow shoes.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 12 of 34Krivonischenko snaps a photo of Kolmogrova snapping her own picture.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 13 of 34Slobodin’s figure is barely visible amid the strong snow and wind.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 14 of 34Since their mysterious deaths, the area where their bodies were found has been called the Dyatlov Pass for their leader, Igor Dyatlov. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 15 of 34Markings left behind by native Mansi hunters.

The bodies of the second group of hikers were discovered by a Mansi man a few months after the first group was found. One theory posited that the Mansi had killed them, but that theory has been largely dismissed.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 16 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle fixes his snow shoes. The photograph was taken on his camera by one of his fellow hikers. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 17 of 34Kolmogrova writes in her journal as the group rests.

Journals left by Kolmogrova and her friends became important evidence in the subsequent investigation.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 18 of 34Dyatlov climbs up a tree as Slobodin takes a photo.

Slobodin’s body was later found in the snow underneath a cedar tree.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 19 of 34The Dyatlov hikers chat and eat amongst themselves.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 20 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle and Zolotaryov caught joking around as they swap their hats.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 21 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle readjusting his clothes after falling into the snow.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 22 of 34Conditions up in the Ural Mountains are famously harsh, with temperatures as low as -22 degrees Fahrenheit.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 23 of 34The hikers take another moment to prepare before their trek. According to their journals, the hiking had become particularly difficult just before their deaths.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 24 of 34The hikers of the Dyatlov Pass Incident make their way through the snow on Feb. 1, 1959. This photo was likely taken on the day they met their tragic fate.Public Domain

25 of 34A view of the tent as the rescuers found it on Feb. 26, 1959.

Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34The body of Lyudmila Dubinina was found in a peculiar position on her knees with her face and chest pressed against a rock in a natural ravine.

Russian National Archives

27 of 34The bodies of Alexander Kolevatov and Semyon Zolotaryov were found together. A camera was found around Zolotaryov’s neck.

Public Domain 28 of 34Corpse of Igor Dyatlov uncovered in the snow.Russian National Files

29 of 34Body of Rustem Slobodin discovered as it was by investigators.Russian National Files

30 of 34The bodies of Yuri Krivonischenko and Yuri Doroshenko.

Russian National Files

31 of 34One of the frozen corpses discovered at the Dyatlov Pass.Public Domain 32 of 34Body of Zina Kolmogorova after her corpse was removed from the snow.

Public Domain

33 of 34An unknown figure caught on the film developed from Thibeaux-Brignolle’s camera.

Some sleuths believe it could be the figure of a yeti or “menk” as the Mansi call it.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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Inside The Final Days Of The Hikers From The Dyatlov Pass Incident View Gallery

In January 1959, a group of young hikers set off on a journey through the Ural Mountains in then-Soviet Russia.

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Nine Russian Hikers Just Disappeared At The Dyatlov Pass, Where Nine Mysteriously Died In 1959

The Dyatlov Pass Incident: The Mysterious 1959 Tragedy That Left 9 Dead

Russia Reopens Investigation Into The Mysterious 1959 Dyatlov Pass Incident

1 of 34The group piles into a truck from Vizhay to the 41st District in the afternoon of Jan. 26, 1959. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 2 of 34Dubinina, Krivonischenko, Thibeaux-Brignolles, and Slobodin having a good time.

This was one of many photographs recovered from Krivonishchenko’s camera.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 3 of 34Yuri Yudin (center) shares a hug with Lyudmila Dubinina before heading back down the mountain due to an old injury. Little did Yudin know it would be the last time he saw his friends.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 4 of 34The group takes a photo with other hikers from a separate group at the rest stop at the 41st District.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 5 of 34The group is preparing to continue their hike up the Ural Mountains. It’s apparent from this photo the kind of stormy, snowy conditions the hikers had to face.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 6 of 34The hikers take a moment amid the snowy trees to regroup.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 7 of 34Igor Dyatlov, Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle (with the hat), and Rustem Slobodin (behind table) inside a cabin en route up the mountain. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 8 of 34A panoramic view of the Urals with Mount Hoy-Ekva peaking out in the background.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 9 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle smiles as his group gets ready for the next part of their arduous trek.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 10 of 34The Dyatlov group poses together with another group, the Blinovs. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 11 of 34Igor Dyatlov (front) ties his snow shoes.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 12 of 34Krivonischenko snaps a photo of Kolmogrova snapping her own picture.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 13 of 34Slobodin’s figure is barely visible amid the strong snow and wind.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 14 of 34Since their mysterious deaths, the area where their bodies were found has been called the Dyatlov Pass for their leader, Igor Dyatlov. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 15 of 34Markings left behind by native Mansi hunters.

The bodies of the second group of hikers were discovered by a Mansi man a few months after the first group was found. One theory posited that the Mansi had killed them, but that theory has been largely dismissed.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 16 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle fixes his snow shoes. The photograph was taken on his camera by one of his fellow hikers. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 17 of 34Kolmogrova writes in her journal as the group rests.

Journals left by Kolmogrova and her friends became important evidence in the subsequent investigation.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 18 of 34Dyatlov climbs up a tree as Slobodin takes a photo.

Slobodin’s body was later found in the snow underneath a cedar tree.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 19 of 34The Dyatlov hikers chat and eat amongst themselves.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 20 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle and Zolotaryov caught joking around as they swap their hats.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 21 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle readjusting his clothes after falling into the snow.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 22 of 34Conditions up in the Ural Mountains are famously harsh, with temperatures as low as -22 degrees Fahrenheit.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 23 of 34The hikers take another moment to prepare before their trek. According to their journals, the hiking had become particularly difficult just before their deaths.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 24 of 34The hikers of the Dyatlov Pass Incident make their way through the snow on Feb. 1, 1959. This photo was likely taken on the day they met their tragic fate.Public Domain

25 of 34A view of the tent as the rescuers found it on Feb. 26, 1959.

Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34The body of Lyudmila Dubinina was found in a peculiar position on her knees with her face and chest pressed against a rock in a natural ravine.

Russian National Archives

27 of 34The bodies of Alexander Kolevatov and Semyon Zolotaryov were found together. A camera was found around Zolotaryov’s neck.

Public Domain 28 of 34Corpse of Igor Dyatlov uncovered in the snow.Russian National Files

29 of 34Body of Rustem Slobodin discovered as it was by investigators.Russian National Files

30 of 34The bodies of Yuri Krivonischenko and Yuri Doroshenko.

Russian National Files

31 of 34One of the frozen corpses discovered at the Dyatlov Pass.Public Domain 32 of 34Body of Zina Kolmogorova after her corpse was removed from the snow.

Public Domain

33 of 34An unknown figure caught on the film developed from Thibeaux-Brignolle’s camera.

Some sleuths believe it could be the figure of a yeti or “menk” as the Mansi call it.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts:

Nine Russian Hikers Just Disappeared At The Dyatlov Pass, Where Nine Mysteriously Died In 1959

The Dyatlov Pass Incident: The Mysterious 1959 Tragedy That Left 9 Dead

Russia Reopens Investigation Into The Mysterious 1959 Dyatlov Pass Incident

1 of 34The group piles into a truck from Vizhay to the 41st District in the afternoon of Jan. 26, 1959. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 2 of 34Dubinina, Krivonischenko, Thibeaux-Brignolles, and Slobodin having a good time.

This was one of many photographs recovered from Krivonishchenko’s camera.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 3 of 34Yuri Yudin (center) shares a hug with Lyudmila Dubinina before heading back down the mountain due to an old injury. Little did Yudin know it would be the last time he saw his friends.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 4 of 34The group takes a photo with other hikers from a separate group at the rest stop at the 41st District.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 5 of 34The group is preparing to continue their hike up the Ural Mountains. It’s apparent from this photo the kind of stormy, snowy conditions the hikers had to face.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 6 of 34The hikers take a moment amid the snowy trees to regroup.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 7 of 34Igor Dyatlov, Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle (with the hat), and Rustem Slobodin (behind table) inside a cabin en route up the mountain. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 8 of 34A panoramic view of the Urals with Mount Hoy-Ekva peaking out in the background.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 9 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle smiles as his group gets ready for the next part of their arduous trek.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 10 of 34The Dyatlov group poses together with another group, the Blinovs. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 11 of 34Igor Dyatlov (front) ties his snow shoes.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 12 of 34Krivonischenko snaps a photo of Kolmogrova snapping her own picture.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 13 of 34Slobodin’s figure is barely visible amid the strong snow and wind.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 14 of 34Since their mysterious deaths, the area where their bodies were found has been called the Dyatlov Pass for their leader, Igor Dyatlov. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 15 of 34Markings left behind by native Mansi hunters.

The bodies of the second group of hikers were discovered by a Mansi man a few months after the first group was found. One theory posited that the Mansi had killed them, but that theory has been largely dismissed.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 16 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle fixes his snow shoes. The photograph was taken on his camera by one of his fellow hikers. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 17 of 34Kolmogrova writes in her journal as the group rests.

Journals left by Kolmogrova and her friends became important evidence in the subsequent investigation.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 18 of 34Dyatlov climbs up a tree as Slobodin takes a photo.

Slobodin’s body was later found in the snow underneath a cedar tree.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 19 of 34The Dyatlov hikers chat and eat amongst themselves.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 20 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle and Zolotaryov caught joking around as they swap their hats.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 21 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle readjusting his clothes after falling into the snow.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 22 of 34Conditions up in the Ural Mountains are famously harsh, with temperatures as low as -22 degrees Fahrenheit.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 23 of 34The hikers take another moment to prepare before their trek. According to their journals, the hiking had become particularly difficult just before their deaths.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 24 of 34The hikers of the Dyatlov Pass Incident make their way through the snow on Feb. 1, 1959. This photo was likely taken on the day they met their tragic fate.Public Domain

25 of 34A view of the tent as the rescuers found it on Feb. 26, 1959.

Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34The body of Lyudmila Dubinina was found in a peculiar position on her knees with her face and chest pressed against a rock in a natural ravine.

Russian National Archives

27 of 34The bodies of Alexander Kolevatov and Semyon Zolotaryov were found together. A camera was found around Zolotaryov’s neck.

Public Domain 28 of 34Corpse of Igor Dyatlov uncovered in the snow.Russian National Files

29 of 34Body of Rustem Slobodin discovered as it was by investigators.Russian National Files

30 of 34The bodies of Yuri Krivonischenko and Yuri Doroshenko.

Russian National Files

31 of 34One of the frozen corpses discovered at the Dyatlov Pass.Public Domain 32 of 34Body of Zina Kolmogorova after her corpse was removed from the snow.

Public Domain

33 of 34An unknown figure caught on the film developed from Thibeaux-Brignolle’s camera.

Some sleuths believe it could be the figure of a yeti or “menk” as the Mansi call it.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts:

Nine Russian Hikers Just Disappeared At The Dyatlov Pass, Where Nine Mysteriously Died In 1959

The Dyatlov Pass Incident: The Mysterious 1959 Tragedy That Left 9 Dead

Russia Reopens Investigation Into The Mysterious 1959 Dyatlov Pass Incident

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1 of 34The group piles into a truck from Vizhay to the 41st District in the afternoon of Jan. 26, 1959. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 2 of 34Dubinina, Krivonischenko, Thibeaux-Brignolles, and Slobodin having a good time.

This was one of many photographs recovered from Krivonishchenko’s camera.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 3 of 34Yuri Yudin (center) shares a hug with Lyudmila Dubinina before heading back down the mountain due to an old injury. Little did Yudin know it would be the last time he saw his friends.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 4 of 34The group takes a photo with other hikers from a separate group at the rest stop at the 41st District.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 5 of 34The group is preparing to continue their hike up the Ural Mountains. It’s apparent from this photo the kind of stormy, snowy conditions the hikers had to face.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 6 of 34The hikers take a moment amid the snowy trees to regroup.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 7 of 34Igor Dyatlov, Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle (with the hat), and Rustem Slobodin (behind table) inside a cabin en route up the mountain. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 8 of 34A panoramic view of the Urals with Mount Hoy-Ekva peaking out in the background.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 9 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle smiles as his group gets ready for the next part of their arduous trek.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 10 of 34The Dyatlov group poses together with another group, the Blinovs. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 11 of 34Igor Dyatlov (front) ties his snow shoes.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 12 of 34Krivonischenko snaps a photo of Kolmogrova snapping her own picture.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 13 of 34Slobodin’s figure is barely visible amid the strong snow and wind.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 14 of 34Since their mysterious deaths, the area where their bodies were found has been called the Dyatlov Pass for their leader, Igor Dyatlov. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 15 of 34Markings left behind by native Mansi hunters.

The bodies of the second group of hikers were discovered by a Mansi man a few months after the first group was found. One theory posited that the Mansi had killed them, but that theory has been largely dismissed.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 16 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle fixes his snow shoes. The photograph was taken on his camera by one of his fellow hikers. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 17 of 34Kolmogrova writes in her journal as the group rests.

Journals left by Kolmogrova and her friends became important evidence in the subsequent investigation.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 18 of 34Dyatlov climbs up a tree as Slobodin takes a photo.

Slobodin’s body was later found in the snow underneath a cedar tree.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 19 of 34The Dyatlov hikers chat and eat amongst themselves.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 20 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle and Zolotaryov caught joking around as they swap their hats.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 21 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle readjusting his clothes after falling into the snow.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 22 of 34Conditions up in the Ural Mountains are famously harsh, with temperatures as low as -22 degrees Fahrenheit.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 23 of 34The hikers take another moment to prepare before their trek. According to their journals, the hiking had become particularly difficult just before their deaths.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 24 of 34The hikers of the Dyatlov Pass Incident make their way through the snow on Feb. 1, 1959. This photo was likely taken on the day they met their tragic fate.Public Domain

25 of 34A view of the tent as the rescuers found it on Feb. 26, 1959.

Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34The body of Lyudmila Dubinina was found in a peculiar position on her knees with her face and chest pressed against a rock in a natural ravine.

Russian National Archives

27 of 34The bodies of Alexander Kolevatov and Semyon Zolotaryov were found together. A camera was found around Zolotaryov’s neck.

Public Domain 28 of 34Corpse of Igor Dyatlov uncovered in the snow.Russian National Files

29 of 34Body of Rustem Slobodin discovered as it was by investigators.Russian National Files

30 of 34The bodies of Yuri Krivonischenko and Yuri Doroshenko.

Russian National Files

31 of 34One of the frozen corpses discovered at the Dyatlov Pass.Public Domain 32 of 34Body of Zina Kolmogorova after her corpse was removed from the snow.

Public Domain

33 of 34An unknown figure caught on the film developed from Thibeaux-Brignolle’s camera.

Some sleuths believe it could be the figure of a yeti or “menk” as the Mansi call it.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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1 of 34The group piles into a truck from Vizhay to the 41st District in the afternoon of Jan. 26, 1959. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

2 of 34Dubinina, Krivonischenko, Thibeaux-Brignolles, and Slobodin having a good time.

This was one of many photographs recovered from Krivonishchenko’s camera.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

3 of 34Yuri Yudin (center) shares a hug with Lyudmila Dubinina before heading back down the mountain due to an old injury. Little did Yudin know it would be the last time he saw his friends.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

4 of 34The group takes a photo with other hikers from a separate group at the rest stop at the 41st District.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

5 of 34The group is preparing to continue their hike up the Ural Mountains. It’s apparent from this photo the kind of stormy, snowy conditions the hikers had to face.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

6 of 34The hikers take a moment amid the snowy trees to regroup.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

7 of 34Igor Dyatlov, Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle (with the hat), and Rustem Slobodin (behind table) inside a cabin en route up the mountain. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

8 of 34A panoramic view of the Urals with Mount Hoy-Ekva peaking out in the background.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

9 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle smiles as his group gets ready for the next part of their arduous trek.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

10 of 34The Dyatlov group poses together with another group, the Blinovs. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

11 of 34Igor Dyatlov (front) ties his snow shoes.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

12 of 34Krivonischenko snaps a photo of Kolmogrova snapping her own picture.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

13 of 34Slobodin’s figure is barely visible amid the strong snow and wind.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

14 of 34Since their mysterious deaths, the area where their bodies were found has been called the Dyatlov Pass for their leader, Igor Dyatlov. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

15 of 34Markings left behind by native Mansi hunters.

The bodies of the second group of hikers were discovered by a Mansi man a few months after the first group was found. One theory posited that the Mansi had killed them, but that theory has been largely dismissed.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

16 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle fixes his snow shoes. The photograph was taken on his camera by one of his fellow hikers. Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

17 of 34Kolmogrova writes in her journal as the group rests.

Journals left by Kolmogrova and her friends became important evidence in the subsequent investigation.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

18 of 34Dyatlov climbs up a tree as Slobodin takes a photo.

Slobodin’s body was later found in the snow underneath a cedar tree.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

19 of 34The Dyatlov hikers chat and eat amongst themselves.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

20 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle and Zolotaryov caught joking around as they swap their hats.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

21 of 34Thibeaux-Brignolle readjusting his clothes after falling into the snow.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

22 of 34Conditions up in the Ural Mountains are famously harsh, with temperatures as low as -22 degrees Fahrenheit.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

23 of 34The hikers take another moment to prepare before their trek. According to their journals, the hiking had become particularly difficult just before their deaths.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

24 of 34The hikers of the Dyatlov Pass Incident make their way through the snow on Feb. 1, 1959. This photo was likely taken on the day they met their tragic fate.Public Domain

25 of 34A view of the tent as the rescuers found it on Feb. 26, 1959.

Wikimedia Commons

26 of 34The body of Lyudmila Dubinina was found in a peculiar position on her knees with her face and chest pressed against a rock in a natural ravine.

Russian National Archives

27 of 34The bodies of Alexander Kolevatov and Semyon Zolotaryov were found together. A camera was found around Zolotaryov’s neck.

Public Domain

28 of 34Corpse of Igor Dyatlov uncovered in the snow.Russian National Files

29 of 34Body of Rustem Slobodin discovered as it was by investigators.Russian National Files

30 of 34The bodies of Yuri Krivonischenko and Yuri Doroshenko.

Russian National Files

31 of 34One of the frozen corpses discovered at the Dyatlov Pass.Public Domain

32 of 34Body of Zina Kolmogorova after her corpse was removed from the snow.

Public Domain

33 of 34An unknown figure caught on the film developed from Thibeaux-Brignolle’s camera.

Some sleuths believe it could be the figure of a yeti or “menk” as the Mansi call it.Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass website

34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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Inside The Final Days Of The Hikers From The Dyatlov Pass Incident View Gallery

Inside The Final Days Of The Hikers From The Dyatlov Pass Incident View Gallery

Inside The Final Days Of The Hikers From The Dyatlov Pass Incident View Gallery

Inside The Final Days Of The Hikers From The Dyatlov Pass Incident View Gallery

Inside The Final Days Of The Hikers From The Dyatlov Pass Incident

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About a month later, all of the hikers were discovered dead and scattered around their campsite in various states of undress. To this day, investigators are not sure how exactly all nine of them perished.

The case has since been called the Dyatlov Pass Incident.

Among the bizarre clues found around their bodies and their campsite, however, were four cameras. These photos of the Dyatlov Pass Incident were developed and used to piece together the events leading up to that fateful night.

Nine Hikers Set Off For Mount Otorten

Teodora Hadjiyska/Dyatlov Pass websiteA group photo of the hikers from the Dyatlov Pass Incident with another group they encountered, the Blinovs, on their journey to Mount Otorten.

On Jan. 23, 1959, Igor Dyatlov led nine other hikers on a journey through the slopes of Kholat Syakhl in the Ural Mountains, which are known for their rough terrain and brutal conditions.

Most of the hikers were students and alumni from the Ural Polytechnical Institute (UPI) who had become friends. Their names were Yuri Doroshenko, Lyudmila Dubinina, Aleksander Kolevatov, Yuri Krivonischenko, Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle, Zinaida Kolmogorova, Semyon Zolotaryov, and Yuri Yudin. They were all experienced hikers and as a group had made similar hikes together before.

The trip kicked off on a good note according to Kolmogorova, a fifth-year radio engineering major at UPI, who had written as much in the group’s joint journal. The group kept a handful of diaries throughout the trip in addition to a series of cameras. The mood on the train was reportedly cheery and photos of the hikers before the Dyatlov Pass Incident occurred proved as much.

On Jan. 26, 1959, the hikers hitched a three-hour ride on the back of a truck from Vizhay to the District 41 logging site. Yuri Yudin experienced sciatica at this point and chose to leave the group and head back home. That decision ended up saving his life.

The next day, the rest of the group continued their journey by foot up the mountains. According to the journal entries on February 1, the hikers made their way out late in the day. The route they had chosen had been remarkably difficult, even for them.

They walked two-and-a-half miles before pitching their tent on a slope of Kholat Syakhl, just 10 miles away from Mount Otorten where they were headed, according to their last journal entry and final photographs.

The Discovery Of Nine Bodies On The Dyatlov Pass

Russian National ArchivesOne of the last-known photos of the nine hikers alive, taken at the camp on Kholat Syakhl. The pass where they died was later named for their group leader, Igor Dyatlov.

When friends and family of the hikers had heard nothing from them by February 20, a volunteer search party was assembled that eventually discovered the hikers’ abandoned campsite.

Here, the search party found the group’s belongings, including the cameras which contained the final photos leading up to the incident. The tent itself was in shambles and there were no signs of any of the hikers. As the situation grew more serious, law enforcement got involved.

The tent appeared to have been cut open from the inside. Meanwhile, eight or nine sets of footprints, seemingly made by bare feet without any socks or shoes on, were also found around the campsite. The footprints led to the edge of the nearby woods about a mile away from the tent.

The first bodies of the group were found about a week after the tent was first discovered. They were Krivonischenko, 23, and Doroshenko, 21, who were both underneath a cedar tree. They were surrounded by remnants of a fire, not too far from the destroyed campsite. Doroshenko’s body was “brown-purple” and he had gray foam coming from his right cheek and gray liquid coming from his mouth.

Then investigators then found the next three bodies, those belonging to Dyatlov, 23, Kolmogorova, 22, and Slobodin, 23. All five of the corpses were hardly clothed, despite temperatures between -13 to −22 degrees Farhenheit. Some of the bodies were even found without shoes and wearing only underwear.

The rest of the group wasn’t discovered until a couple of months later after much of the mountain’s snow had thawed. Thibeaux-Brignolles, 23, Dubinina, 20, and Zolotaryov, 38, were found inside a ravine 187 feet deep in the woods. These three had the most clothing of all the hikers, even wearing each other’s items. Investigators thought this meant they had gone back to their dead friends and taken their clothes for warmth. But why not just go back to the campsite?

Russian National ArchivesZinaida Kolmogorova, found buried in the snow.

Indeed, the discovery of the bodies seemed to turn up more clues than it did answers. For one thing, there was the gruesome condition in which the corpses were found.

Thibeaux-Brignolles’ had suffered significant skull damage moments before his death, and Dubinina and Zolotaryov had significant chest fractures that could only be caused by an immense force comparable to that of a car crash.

Dubinina’s body was by far in the worst condition. She was missing her tongue, eyes, part of her lips, as well as some facial tissue. A fragment of her skull bone was also missing. These are just some of the unexplained discoveries from the investigation.

The scattered nature of the group members puzzled authorities and they thought this suggested that the hikers left their campsite in a hurry, leaving behind most of their belongings as a result. But if the campers had left their site in a hurry, unable even to dress properly, why had one of them thought to bring his camera along with him?

What The Photos Of The Dyatlov Pass Incident Show

Around the neck of Zolotoryov’s corpse, investigators found a camera. Three other cameras had turned up back at the campsite together with six rolls of film. Unfortunately, Zolotoryov’s film was too damaged when developed and had captured nothing but blurs.

Investigators also believed that there were likely more than four cameras but could not account for their disappearances. They reasoned only that the four cameras they found belonged to possibly Dyatlov, Zolotaryov, Krivonischenko, and Slobodin.

Luckily, authorities did manage to develop many of the photos of the Dyatlov Pass incident and used them to piece together the relationships of the hikers and to determine whether foul play was a possibility. They largely believed after observing the jovial photographs that the hikers were harmonious and likely not responsible for each others’ deaths.

Listen above to the History Uncovered podcast, episode 2: The Dyatlov Pass Incident, also available on iTunes and Spotify.

The first investigation was closed without a satisfying conclusion. Then, 60 years after the Dyatlov Pass Incident, the Russian government reopened the investigation in February 2019. Still, they did not find much.

Authorities determined the cause of the students’ deaths to be hypothermia after some sort of unexplained natural force such as an avalanche forced the group out of their tent. But to many, this conclusion remains unsatisfying.

And so for now, the mystery of the Dyatlov Pass Incident continues.

Now that you’ve taken a look at these photos of the Dyatlov Pass Incident, learn about the disturbing story of 15-year-old Emanuela Orlandi, who disappeared inside the Vatican. Then, read about the unresolved true story behind the Atlanta Child Murders.