Vanished in the Wilderness: The Disappearances No One Can Explain episode artwork

EPISODE · May 4, 2026 · 12 MIN

Vanished in the Wilderness: The Disappearances No One Can Explain

from The Strange History Podcast · host Strange History

What really happens when people disappear in the wilderness… and are never found? In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, we explore real, documented cases of people who vanished without a trace in national parks, forests, and remote landscapes across the United States. From the 1969 disappearance of Dennis Martin in the Great Smoky Mountains, to the mysterious fate of Glen and Bessie Hyde in the Grand Canyon, and the haunting final journal entries of Geraldine Largay, these cases raise questions that still don’t have clear answers. We also examine the disappearance of Jaryd Atadero and DeOrr Kunz Jr., along with broader patterns seen in wilderness disappearances—sudden vanishings, lack of evidence, and search efforts that come up empty. With over 600,000 missing persons reported annually in the U.S. and thousands of search-and-rescue missions taking place in national parks each year, this episode explores the scale of the issue, the environments where these cases occur, and the theories people use to explain them. Is it simply the unpredictability of nature… or something we don’t fully understand? If you’re fascinated by true mystery, unexplained disappearances, wilderness survival, and real-life unsolved cases—this is an episode you won’t forget.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-strange-history-podcast--5773362/support.🎧 The Strange History Podcast Love bizarre true stories, forgotten scandals, and history’s most unhinged moments?Submit your ideas for The Strange History PodcastFollow The Strange History Podcast wherever you listen and never miss an episode. 🔗 Listen & Subscribe:Apple PodcastsSpotifyiHeartRadioAudibleNew episodes regularly. History gets weird here.

What really happens when people disappear in the wilderness… and are never found? In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, we explore real, documented cases of people who vanished without a trace in national parks, forests, and remote landscapes across the United States. From the 1969 disappearance of Dennis Martin in the Great Smoky Mountains, to the mysterious fate of Glen and Bessie Hyde in the Grand Canyon, and the haunting final journal entries of Geraldine Largay, these cases raise questions that still don’t have clear answers. We also examine the disappearance of Jaryd Atadero and DeOrr Kunz Jr., along with broader patterns seen in wilderness disappearances—sudden vanishings, lack of evidence, and search efforts that come up empty. With over 600,000 missing persons reported annually in the U.S. and thousands of search-and-rescue missions taking place in national parks each year, this episode explores the scale of the issue, the environments where these cases occur, and the theories people use to explain them. Is it simply the unpredictability of nature… or something we don’t fully understand? If you’re fascinated by true mystery, unexplained disappearances, wilderness survival, and real-life unsolved cases—this is an episode you won’t forget.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-strange-history-podcast--5773362/support.🎧 The Strange History Podcast Love bizarre true stories, forgotten scandals, and history’s most unhinged moments?Submit your ideas for The Strange History PodcastFollow The Strange History Podcast wherever you listen and never miss an episode. 🔗 Listen & Subscribe:Apple PodcastsSpotifyiHeartRadioAudibleNew episodes regularly. History gets weird here.

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Vanished in the Wilderness: The Disappearances No One Can Explain

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This episode is 12 minutes long.

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This episode was published on May 4, 2026.

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What really happens when people disappear in the wilderness… and are never found? In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, we explore real, documented cases of people who vanished without a trace in national parks, forests, and remote...

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