Top 20 People Who Are Frozen in Time
Summary
Top 20 People Who Are Frozen in Time. As of 2014, about 250 corpses have been cryogenically preserved in the U.S., and around 1,500 people have signed up to have their remains preserved. As of 2016, four facilities exist in the world […]

Top 20 People Who Are Frozen in Time. As of 2014, about 250 corpses have been cryogenically preserved in the U.S., and around 1,500 people have signed up to have their remains preserved. As of 2016, four facilities exist in the world to retain cryopreserved bodies: three in the U.S. and one in Russia. This is not the end; there are a few more. This one video of 2020 can really boost up your IQ. Let’s not wait; just get started. Here are the top 20 people who are frozen in time.
Video: Top 20 People Who Are Frozen in Time
La Doncella
The girl and two other children were left on a mountaintop to succumb to the cold as offerings to the gods, according to the archaeologists who found the mummified remains in Argentina in 1999. La Doncella was found dressed in a ceremonial tunic and adorned with a headpiece, tokens of her new status as a messenger to the heavens. The girl had also drunk corn liquor, likely to put her to sleep, scientists say, and her mouth still held fragments of coca leaves, which the Inca chewed to lessen the effects of altitude sickness. Indeed a scary true story over 500 years ago.
Video: Top 20 People Who Are Frozen in Time
The Beauty of Xiahoe
A rare Bronze Age Caucasian mummy whose origin, culture, and fate remain a mystery, but whose existence extends the history of the Silk Road back over 2000 years and redefines the ancient world. This historic exhibition of over 150 objects comes from the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region Museum and the Xinjiang Institute of Archaeology in Ürümchi, China, and reflects the full extent of Silk Road trade from China to the Mediterranean.
LADY ZIN ZHUI
You may hear her at Creepypasta, yes. Xin Zhui, also known as Lady Dai or Marquise of Dai, was the wife of Li Chang, Marquis of Dai, who lived during the Han Dynasty. Her body was preserved, and she was a member of the ruling class. She was found in an unusually large coffin filled with wealthy artifacts and fine fabrics in Mawangdui, in Changsha, Hunan Province, China. The items in the coffin indicated that she was an upper-class noble who was important in her time.
ITIGILOV
Mongolian scientists, according to reports in the Siberian Times and local Mongol media, are investigating the remains of what researchers describe as the 200-year-old corpse of a monk who was found frozen—yes—in lotus position. The monk is sitting in the lotus position, and the left hand is opened, and the right hand symbolizes the preaching Sutra. Though incredible, there is an undeniably rich history of scientists discovering so-called “accidental mummies” in areas of extreme chill like Mongolia.
What if you hear about some scary stories that are real for sure? Here is number 5.
Hedviga Golik
You may already know her through WatchMojo or Bright Side because she is very popular. She made herself a cup of tea and sat down to watch some television in her hometown of Zagreb, Croatia. Sadly, she died in her chair. This was in 1966. She was just found, 42 years later, in her time capsule mausoleum where she’s been sitting ever since. She never finished her tea. When officers went there, they said it was like stepping into a place frozen in time.
Arctic civilization mummies-NES
Two medieval mummies from an Arctic civilization have been discovered at the edge of Siberia. The remains of an adult and a baby were found in the Zelenyy Yar necropolis, an archaeological complex discovered in 1997. The amazing fact is they were covered in copper, the adult having been plated from head to toe. Excavations at Zelenyy Yar ended last week, but over the course of this year’s expedition to the Arctic site, scientists found 10 graves. Five had not been looted for their “grave goods,” valuable objects placed with bodies in ancient burials.
Ewa Wisnerska
In February 2007, 35-year-old paraglider Ewa Wisnerska became frozen in the air as she was paragliding over Manila, New South Wales, Australia. Ewa was preparing for the World Paragliding Championships when a storm sucked her into the clouds. She was continuously hit by rainfall and orange-sized hailstones as the storm took her from roughly 2,500 ft. to 32,000 ft. in just 15 minutes. She passed out as temperatures plummeted to minus 50 degrees Celsius, or –58°F, and she could not get enough oxygen.
Sleeping Beauty
News is going around in social networks and some communication media saying that in September 1969, Russian scientists were working in a pickling process on a coal mine in the village of Rzhavchik Tisulskago in the Kemerovo region. At 70 meters depth, the miner Karnaukhov found a marble coffin of an incredibly precise manufacture. They stopped the works immediately, and the coffin was taken to the surface, and from it a strange crystalline blue and rose liquid of a strange texture flowed. A woman of unusual beauty of approximately 30 years was found inside the coffin, with very fine European traits and blue eyes. People from the village came by to visit her and called her “Princess Tilusky.”.
Ötzi the iceman
High in a remote area of the Oetztaler Alps in northern Italy, 5,300 years ago, Oetzi the Iceman was shot in the back with an arrow. It hit a main artery, and he probably bled to death within minutes. His body was preserved in the ice, making him one of the oldest and best-preserved mummies on Earth.Hence a Reddit story! Are you ready to learn about the top 10 of the list? Here you go.
Anna Bagenholm
In May 1999, Anna Bagenholm, a 29-year-old radiologist, was skiing with two other colleagues in the Kjolen Mountains in Norway when she fell into a frozen stream. Her head was underwater while her legs were above. Her colleagues tried pulling her out, but the water was frozen. She was also stuck between some rocks. One interesting fact is that she found a pocket of air under the ice, but things went from bad to worse. She was slowly sinking into the water. She struggled to free herself for 40 minutes until she stopped moving.
Beck Weathers
On the night of May 10, 1996, Beck Weathers huddled with 10 other climbers on an exposed stretch of Mount Everest, 26,000 feet above sea level. A blizzard churned the air into a slurry of ice and snow. Their supplemental oxygen was fully depleted, and they struggled for each breath. Weathers, a 49-year-old Dallas pathologist, was worse off than most. Earlier that day, he’d gone almost entirely blind — the altitude-induced effect of a recent corneal operation — and as the sun set, his body temperature dropped and his heart slowed.
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Stella Berndtsson
7-year-old Stella Berndtsson drowned in icy water on Dec 23, 2010. Her body was found after 3½ hours by a rescue helicopter and was taken to the hospital. Her body temperature was 13°C/55.4°F. Despite this, the doctors succeeded in saving Stella by warming her slowly. Stella made a remarkable recovery. Despite the progress, doctors were still very cautious. They warned that if Stella did wake up, it was very unlikely that she would be the same girl as before.
Jean Hilliard
On December 20, 1980, Hilliard was involved in a car accident that resulted in car failure in cold weather. She walked to a friend’s house 2 miles away and collapsed 15 feet away from the door. Temperatures dropped to −22°F, and she was found “frozen solid,” according to witnesses, at 7 a.m. the following morning after six hours in the cold, though doctors say her stiffness was likely due to powerful muscle contractions rather than actual freezing.
James Bedford
A psych professor at the University of California, was the first person to ever be cryonically preserved. The choice to be preserved by freezing was entirely his; he even left money for a steel capsule and liquid nitrogen in his will. So, when he died on January 12, 1967, his family abided by his wishes. It was a big day in the cryonics community, and they still refer to January 12 as “Bedford Day.”
Dick Clair Jones
He was in the television industry: he was a producer, actor, and writer who had a hand in The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Bob Newhart Show, The Facts of Life, and Mama’s Family. He was also really interested in cryonics and was a member of the Cryonics Society of California. In 1988, he died of AIDS-related infections and was immediately put on ice – literally, as you can see from the picture. There’s an account of the whole process here, which is fascinating, if not bizarre.
Thomas K. Donaldson
A mathematician had ideas about death that were even stranger than cryonics. He believed that even though people were “dead,” their brains continued to exist and have functionality and we just don’t have the technology to access it yet. For his sake, let’s hope that’s true; he died in 2006 and is assumed to have been cryonically preserved. He seemed to be pretty confident that he would be back someday.
FM-2030.
Yeah, that was his real name. He was born Fereidoun M. Esfandiary, but changed his name to reflect his goal of living to be 100, 2030 would have been his 100th birthday. He also predicted that 2030 would be “a magical time. In 2030 we will be ageless, and everyone will have an excellent chance to live forever. 2030 is a dream and a goal.” He died in 2000 at the age of 69 when he succumbed to pancreatic cancer. He was cryogenically frozen because he believed that people would soon develop synthetic organs and body parts that would make the notion of death a thing of the past.
Ted Williams
He is without a doubt the most famous cryogenically frozen person. But the circumstances surrounding his freezing are a bit controversial. His son, John-Henry Williams, was adamant that his father wanted to be preserved to be brought back in the future and wanted his whole family to follow suit so they could be reunited when technology and medicine made it possible. However, Ted’s will said he wanted to be cremated, and his daughter by his first wife took John-Henry to court over the matter.
Vladimir Lenin
When Lenin who was a Russian revolutionary and politician died in January 1924, most Soviet leaders opposed the idea of preserving his body beyond a temporary period of public display. The cold winter kept Lenin’s publicly displayed corpse in fair condition for almost two months as huge crowds waited to pay their respects. Russian scientists have developed experimental embalming methods to maintain the look, feel and flexibility of the Soviet Union’s founder’s body, which is 145 years old today. Indeed a leader got frozen in time.
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George Mallory
In 1999, news broke that the body of explorer and mountaineer George Mallory had turned up. Mallory had disappeared some 75 years earlier, while trying to become the first person to scale Mount Everest, and now, an expedition searching for his remains had found them at the foot of the Northeast Ridge, mummified and frozen solid. A label sewn into the tattered clothing confirmed that the remains belonged to Mallory.
Which one did you find the scariest? Do you know any other people like this? Let us know in the comment section.