If I told you a Greek tragedy played out in the Indian Himalayas a millennium after the Greeks supposedly left, you’d probably tell me to lay off the ancient alien documentaries.

I agree. I hate that stuff. But unfortunately, the DNA lab doesn't care about our history textbooks.

The Place: Roopkund Lake. Sitting at 16,000 feet in the Himalayas, it’s a frozen glacial bowl that melts for one month a year. When it does, it reveals its contents: over 500 human skeletons scattered like confetti.

For decades, the story was simple: "A lost army died in a storm." Or "A king's pilgrimage went wrong." Classic folklore. But then the 2019 genomic study dropped, and the timeline broke. The DNA revealed two distinct groups died there.

  • Group A: Indians (died ~800 AD). Makes sense.
  • Group B: People with Mediterranean ancestry (Crete/Greece) who died in 1800 AD.

NOW THE QUESTION: What was a group of Greek travelers doing on a forbidden Hindu pilgrimage route in the 19th Century? They weren't soldiers (no weapons). They weren't traders (wrong route). Isotope analysis proves they had been eating local food for weeks.

They weren't lost. They were looking for something specific on that summit, and a freak cricket-ball-sized hailstorm silenced them before they could find it.

I dug into the forensic timeline to figure out the "Why." The "How" is weather. The "Why" is a cover-up.

The Evidence (Video):https://youtu.be/Ot-GYx96CTE

The Full Case File (Book): If you want the deep dive into the forensic data and the historical anomalies, I mapped it out in DarkSutra.https://books2read.com/u/mdoZzW

Join the Research:https://linktr.ee/DarkSutra

Fuel the Investigation:https://rzp.io/rzp/8XxaokFR

by Critical-Term-8207

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