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THE PENDLE HAUNTINGS A Forensic Investigation into 400 Years of Paranormal Activity on Lancashire's Most Cursed Hill
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235551602
- EAN9798235551602
- Date de parution06/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Pendle Hill is more than a postcard landmark in Lancashire. For four centuries, it has been one of England's most notorious hotspots of alleged witchcraft, ghostly apparitions, and unexplained lights. But what if those hauntings are not superstition - or simple ghost stories - at all?In The Pendle Hauntings: A Forensic Investigation into 400 Years of Paranormal Activity on Lancashire's Most Cursed Hill, researcher and author Simon C.
Lowe strips away folklore and tourism to treat Pendle as a crime scene that has been active since long before the famous 1612 witch trials. Drawing on archival records, eyewitness testimonies, seismological data, and cutting-edge theories in geology and neuroscience, he argues that the hill itself is functioning as a kind of vast, piezoelectric recording device. From the chained woman heard dragging iron across wet stone, to the child in the mist, to the silent walking procession that tracks the exact death route to Lancaster Castle, Lowe shows how recurring apparitions line up with fault lines, seismic stress, and infrasound "hot zones" beneath the landscape.
He builds a detailed model in which quartz-rich rock, tectonic pressure, and human trauma combine to generate electromagnetic imprints that replay across generations - turning Pendle into a living archive of environmental memory. Yet even this rigorous framework cannot fully explain the most disturbing cases: negative thermal voids recorded on FLIR, primary radar returns from something moving low and slow over the corridor, and trail-camera footage of the so-called Watchers turning their heads to acknowledge the observer.
These residual anomalies force the investigation to confront a harder question: if the hill is a battery, what exactly is drawing on its power?Blending historical narrative, field investigation, and hard science, The Pendle Hauntings is for readers who want more than campfire tales - a deeply researched exploration of how place, geology, and human fear can fuse into a phenomenon that refuses to die.
You are not being asked to believe in ghosts. You are being asked to believe in evidence.
Lowe strips away folklore and tourism to treat Pendle as a crime scene that has been active since long before the famous 1612 witch trials. Drawing on archival records, eyewitness testimonies, seismological data, and cutting-edge theories in geology and neuroscience, he argues that the hill itself is functioning as a kind of vast, piezoelectric recording device. From the chained woman heard dragging iron across wet stone, to the child in the mist, to the silent walking procession that tracks the exact death route to Lancaster Castle, Lowe shows how recurring apparitions line up with fault lines, seismic stress, and infrasound "hot zones" beneath the landscape.
He builds a detailed model in which quartz-rich rock, tectonic pressure, and human trauma combine to generate electromagnetic imprints that replay across generations - turning Pendle into a living archive of environmental memory. Yet even this rigorous framework cannot fully explain the most disturbing cases: negative thermal voids recorded on FLIR, primary radar returns from something moving low and slow over the corridor, and trail-camera footage of the so-called Watchers turning their heads to acknowledge the observer.
These residual anomalies force the investigation to confront a harder question: if the hill is a battery, what exactly is drawing on its power?Blending historical narrative, field investigation, and hard science, The Pendle Hauntings is for readers who want more than campfire tales - a deeply researched exploration of how place, geology, and human fear can fuse into a phenomenon that refuses to die.
You are not being asked to believe in ghosts. You are being asked to believe in evidence.











