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10 of the Most Outlandish Scientific Hoaxes Ever

We’re conditioned to believe whatever scientists tell us, but anybody can put on a white lab coat and some thick glasses.

By Cameron_Fetter

Published 5 months ago in Facepalm

We’re conditioned to believe whatever scientists tell us, but anybody can put on a white lab coat and some thick glasses. 


From fake ancient fossils to spurious futuristic inventions, people have expected society to believe some pretty ridiculous things. And the funny thing is, society often does!


What bothers me is, why go to all the work of making a fake petrified giant or taxidermied mermaid when you know somebody is just going to find out it isn’t real? Why not spend your time on something productive, like inventing a submarine to find an actual mermaid? 


Oh well, I guess that’s why these guys are the phony scientists, not me.

  • 1

    The Hotheaded Naked Ice Borer

    The hotheaded naked ice borer was an April Fools joke created by Discover magazine in 1995. It supposedly used its blood vessels to heat the bony lump on its head to a high temperature, and then melted its way through ice with the heated appendage. Though it was pretty obviously a joke, many regarded the story as true, and the magazine received more mail for that article than any piece ever before.

    The Hotheaded Naked Ice Borer

  • 2

    William Mumler

    A man named William Mumler gained renown in the mid-1800s for his apparent ability to capture ghosts on camera. People on the East Coast flocked to him for closure on their dead friends and family members, paying handsomely for the photos. Mumler manipulated the photos using stock images to fool his marks.

    William Mumler

  • 3

    Bigfoot Tracks

    A man named Ray Wallace gave rise to the immortal legend of Bigfoot when he created a trail of fake tracks using these large carved wooden feet. His simple prank on a camp of loggers grew into one of the greatest pieces of Americana lore in history.

    Bigfoot Tracks

  • 4

    Archaeoraptor

    In 1999, the scientific community was stunned by the discovery of a fossilized feathered dinosaur called Archaeoraptor, that was theorized to be the missing link between dinosaurs and modern birds. The fossil turned out to be just various pieces of other fossils all glued together.

    Archaeoraptor

  • 5

    Piltdown Man

    In 1912, an amateur archaeologist named Charles Dawson discovered a jawbone and fragments of a skull that he claimed belonged to the missing link between human and ape. In the 1950s, when scientists re-examined the bones, they discovered they were from an orangutan, stained with chemicals to appear old.

    Piltdown Man

  • 6

    Perpetual Motion Machine

    A man named Charles Redheffer claimed to have invented a perpetual motion machine in 1813. A skeptical mechanical engineer noticed a wobble in the machine and decided to investigate. He discovered the true mechanism of the machine’s motion– an old man in the attic, turning a crank and eating a piece of bread.

    Perpetual Motion Machine

  • 7

    Tempted by the Devil

    In 1981, a Japanese archaeologist named Shinichi Fujimara discovered 40,000 year old stoneware, the oldest artifacts ever found in Japan. Then, in 2000, he discovered 600,000 year old stoneware, which would have been the oldest signs of human life ever discovered. Then, a Japanese newspaper published photos of Fujimara planting the artifacts for himself to find. He confessed and claimed that he had been “possessed by an uncontrollable urge” and “tempted by the devil.”

    Tempted by the Devil

  • 8

    Mary Toft

    In 1726, a woman named Mary Toft became the center of attention when she claimed to have given birth to dozens of dead rabbits and other animals. She became a minor celebrity. The hoax was uncovered when somebody caught a servant trying to sneak a rabbit into Mary’s room. She was doing something we’d rather not mention in order to give birth to the rabbits.

    Mary Toft

  • 9

    Fur-Bearing Trout

    Furry trout have been a common hoax throughout history. In the 1930s, a Chamber of Commerce rep created three ‘fur-bearing trout’ by wrapping trout in rabbit fur. They ended up on display in the Salida Museum in Colorado. Furry trout have been “spotted” as recently as 2015.

    Fur-Bearing Trout

  • 10

    Lying Stones

    In 1725, Johann Behringer, the chair of natural history at a Bavarian university, was brought several carved stones by a few of his students. The stones were carved with various depictions of animals and Hebrew letters. Behringer believed the stones were from antediluvian times and proved the existence of the Great Flood, even publishing a book about it. Just as the book was published, his students came clean and admitted they had carved the stones themselves. They became known as the ‘Lying Stones’.

    Lying Stones

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