Here is a report on an area known as `Gravity Hill` in York County, Pennsylvania, USA.
There are a number of this `gravity defying` locations scattered around the country, and each, they seem, have a legend of haunting attached to the phenomenon.
They have all been debunked scientifically as an optical illusion.
Read the report and see the video. It really does look like cars travel up-hill!
York, PA - Around the bends of rural Wyndamere Road, just beyond the graves of Tri-County Memorial Gardens, there's an intersection in Fairview Township where mounds of earth and trees rising from the shoulders keep a legend alive.
Masquerading as any other York County hill, Pleasant View Road seems to defy the laws of physics.
Down is up -- or so it seems -- at the stop sign where drivers can shift their vehicles into neutral and quickly realize the gravity of the situation.
Cars roll up -- yes, up -- the incline.
Is it a magnet? An illusion? Paranormal activity?
That all depends on what you believe.
Some locals claim it was a group of teenagers, "football players, perhaps coming from a game at Red Land High School just up the road," that died instantly when a truck t-boned their car at that intersection, according to York Hospital Dr. Leo Motter, the author of "Haunted Places in York County Pennsylvania."
The ghosts of those young lives cut short -- an incident of which Motter could find no records -- are said to be behind the phenomena.
"These kids somehow try to protect people from this dangerous intersection," he said. "They push the cars away to save people."
Spreading powder over one's car hood allegedly reveals phantom fingerprints.
Similar sites exist around the country, mostly asserting the same story of haunted heroism -- someone killed in an automobile accident returns from the grave to spare passing motorists from a similar grisly fate.
Many, like one in Bedford County, have become tourist attractions, garnering more attention than York County's secluded wonder -- an unmarked pilgrimage destination for the occasional thrillseeking teenager or local resident trying to frighten a friend.
Fairview Township Police Chief Bernard Dugan hopes it stays that way. Hanging out on a public street isn't advised.
"Are people still doing that?" he asked.
Dugan first heard the legend 20 years ago. He hasn't tested the theory himself.
"I don't think we really ever did catch a boatload of people out there, quite frankly," he said. "We just hear about it from time-to-time."
Danielle Gross, 30, of Fairview Township, still remembers her visit to the supposedly supernatural slope.
Four years ago, on an early summer evening, she was returning home from scuba lessons at Red Land High School with her now-husband and his parents. They told her the story of ghost children, victims of an ill-fated bus journey, known to push cars up Pleasant View Road.
"Not that anyone believed it, but I guess it makes a good story," she said.
"I'm sure that when I have kids someday, we'll show them, too. Freak them out around Halloween."
Perhaps a physics lesson, too, might be useful. Things do not roll uphill, said professor Sardari Khanna.
This hill is an optical illusion, he said, explained by the principle of "gravity paradox," the idea that different objects with mass centered in different areas have infinite gravitational capabilities.
Also, he said, and the combinations of angular terrain in the area could produce the illusion that a slight downhill slope is actually uphill.
On Friday, in his science lab at York College, a wooden cylinder rolled easily down two v-shaped wooden bars propped into a slope.
"Watch the magic," he said, placing a wooden prism -- two cones base-to-base -- at the bottom of the same configuration.
Though it appears to roll upward, its axis, or center of mass, is actually getting lower -- like your car might be on Pleasant View Road.
"It has to be," Khanna said. "There's no question about that."
Source: York Daily Record
There are a number of this `gravity defying` locations scattered around the country, and each, they seem, have a legend of haunting attached to the phenomenon.
They have all been debunked scientifically as an optical illusion.
Read the report and see the video. It really does look like cars travel up-hill!
York, PA - Around the bends of rural Wyndamere Road, just beyond the graves of Tri-County Memorial Gardens, there's an intersection in Fairview Township where mounds of earth and trees rising from the shoulders keep a legend alive.
Masquerading as any other York County hill, Pleasant View Road seems to defy the laws of physics.
Down is up -- or so it seems -- at the stop sign where drivers can shift their vehicles into neutral and quickly realize the gravity of the situation.
Cars roll up -- yes, up -- the incline.
Is it a magnet? An illusion? Paranormal activity?
That all depends on what you believe.
Some locals claim it was a group of teenagers, "football players, perhaps coming from a game at Red Land High School just up the road," that died instantly when a truck t-boned their car at that intersection, according to York Hospital Dr. Leo Motter, the author of "Haunted Places in York County Pennsylvania."
The ghosts of those young lives cut short -- an incident of which Motter could find no records -- are said to be behind the phenomena.
"These kids somehow try to protect people from this dangerous intersection," he said. "They push the cars away to save people."
Spreading powder over one's car hood allegedly reveals phantom fingerprints.
Similar sites exist around the country, mostly asserting the same story of haunted heroism -- someone killed in an automobile accident returns from the grave to spare passing motorists from a similar grisly fate.
Many, like one in Bedford County, have become tourist attractions, garnering more attention than York County's secluded wonder -- an unmarked pilgrimage destination for the occasional thrillseeking teenager or local resident trying to frighten a friend.
Fairview Township Police Chief Bernard Dugan hopes it stays that way. Hanging out on a public street isn't advised.
"Are people still doing that?" he asked.
Dugan first heard the legend 20 years ago. He hasn't tested the theory himself.
"I don't think we really ever did catch a boatload of people out there, quite frankly," he said. "We just hear about it from time-to-time."
Danielle Gross, 30, of Fairview Township, still remembers her visit to the supposedly supernatural slope.
Four years ago, on an early summer evening, she was returning home from scuba lessons at Red Land High School with her now-husband and his parents. They told her the story of ghost children, victims of an ill-fated bus journey, known to push cars up Pleasant View Road.
"Not that anyone believed it, but I guess it makes a good story," she said.
"I'm sure that when I have kids someday, we'll show them, too. Freak them out around Halloween."
Perhaps a physics lesson, too, might be useful. Things do not roll uphill, said professor Sardari Khanna.
This hill is an optical illusion, he said, explained by the principle of "gravity paradox," the idea that different objects with mass centered in different areas have infinite gravitational capabilities.
Also, he said, and the combinations of angular terrain in the area could produce the illusion that a slight downhill slope is actually uphill.
On Friday, in his science lab at York College, a wooden cylinder rolled easily down two v-shaped wooden bars propped into a slope.
"Watch the magic," he said, placing a wooden prism -- two cones base-to-base -- at the bottom of the same configuration.
Though it appears to roll upward, its axis, or center of mass, is actually getting lower -- like your car might be on Pleasant View Road.
"It has to be," Khanna said. "There's no question about that."
Source: York Daily Record
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