On July 30, 1945, the USS Indianapolis was sunk by a Japanese submarine in the South Pacific, with 25 crew members escaping in lifeboats. Remarkably, 46 years later, on July 31, 1991, Filipino fishermen discovered a lifeboat containing 25 American Navy personnel in the Sibuyan Sea. Their uniforms were outdated, yet they seemed to have an uncanny understanding of the situation at the time, leaving many puzzled.

During World War II, a fighter squadron in North America lost a P-38 aircraft, but astonishingly, it returned to the airfield 45 years later, with an empty fuel tank and the pilot shot in the forehead, yet still able to parachute to safety. This incident caught the attention of the U.S. Air Force and was recorded in classified files.

In 1935, the crew of the British ship Aztec reported seeing the ghost ship La Dahama in the Atlantic, which was damaged and had no survivors. Fast forward to 1990, when a bizarre skeleton of a medieval knight, complete with modern bullet holes, was discovered beneath an Austrian castle, defying belief.

In 1990, a French archaeological team unearthed the ruins of a sun temple dating back to around 2000 BC along the Nile River, where an ancient stone tablet concealed a never-issued $25 silver coin from the United States, an astonishing time span.

These instances of time travel and mysterious disappearances and reappearances challenge scientific explanations and ignite endless imagination about "time tunnels."