Northern Mysteries

He heard about the rumored giant Sasquatch, a name which means "wild men of the woods," from an old Indian hired to take him up the fjord.

Lake Memphremagog is a long finger-like running south from Magog, Quebec (near Sherbrooke) across the Canada/US border to about Newport, Vermont.

In 1961 two fishermen saw a black creature about 40 feet (12 m) long swimming, partially submerged, past their boat.

"The McKay Avenue School & The Vogue Theatre" – Edmonton's oldest surviving brick schoolhouse was the site of the first Alberta legislature in 1906–1907.

By 1970, the story was reaching mythical proportions: the ghost of Ambrose Small was reported haunting one of his former properties, the Grand Theater in London, Ontario and is credited to have saved the theatre's most prominent architectural feature from unintentional demolition.

The disappearance was still a big enough story in 1974, for the Toronto Sun tabloid to print a series of six full-page accounts of the case.

Whether it is viewed as evidence of supernatural activity, something for scientists to get their teeth into and explain logically, or just a scary tale to tell by the fire on a dark night, it is a truly disturbing case.

"The Lost Lemon Mine & Oak Island" – Somewhere in south-western Alberta, in the Crowsnest Pass, close by Coleman (according to some), it is said, is a gold vein worth millions.

The Oak Island Money Pit is the site of the world's longest running hunt for lost treasure.

In 1968, In St. Joseph Du Colleran, children playing in a cemetery encountered a strange being near an odd rock which had been split open; the creature appeared for 3 days, then vanished.

The focus of the disturbances caused by the poltergeist (an unseen but noisy spirit) was the farmhouse of George and Susan Dagg in the village of Clarendon on the north side of the Ottawa River, near Shawville, Quebec.

She tells the lifeguard who calls the hotel security guard, who contacts the police and a journalist from La Presse newspaper.

The crash was investigated by various Canadian government agencies, and at least one underwater search was launched to recover remains of the object.

The Canadian government declared that no known aircraft was involved and the source of the crash remains unknown to this day, at least publicly.

Captive cult members directed searchers to Constanzo's private cemetery, and excavation began revealing 15 mutilated corpses by April 16, 1989, including American student Mark Kilroy.

It was also during this time that he witnessed something horrific in the farm's barn that is never explained fully but which is only hinted at as involving sex of some kind.