AnomalyDesk is a small independent archive that publishes investigative case files on declassified government records, unexplained events, conspiracy stories, UFO and UAP encounters, and the unresolved ancient. The format is fixed; the tone is restrained. Every file is opened with what's known and closed only where the evidence allows.
Most coverage of these subjects sits at one of two extremes. On one side, sensationalist treatment dramatizes thin evidence into certainty — turning a single witness report into proof, or a stamped-but-blank document into a smoking gun. On the other side, blanket dismissal refuses to engage with material the historical record actually contains: real declassified programs, real unexplained disappearances, real intelligence operations that were denied for decades and then quietly confirmed.
Neither posture serves a reader trying to understand a case. The dramatized version is wrong about what's been established. The dismissive version is wrong about what's missing. AnomalyDesk tries to occupy the narrow space in between — the same space a working investigator or historian occupies — by separating what's documented from what's claimed, and refusing to close cases that aren't actually closed.
Every file on AnomalyDesk uses the same structure, in the same order. The reader should be able to tell within thirty seconds of landing on any case what the evidence supports, what's contested, and where the file is still open.
A short summary: what happened, when, where, who's involved. The minimum the reader needs before any analysis makes sense.
The documented record. Material with primary sources behind it: declassified records, court filings, eyewitness depositions taken under oath, contemporary news coverage from credible outlets, peer-reviewed research. Each claim in this section is linked to its source.
The mainstream or institutional explanation, presented fairly even when we're skeptical of it. If a government agency, a major outlet, or a serious academic position says X, we report what X is and where it comes from. Disagreement with the claim is fine; misrepresenting it isn't.
The gap between the documented record and a complete account. The questions the evidence doesn't answer, the documents that were destroyed before disclosure, the witnesses who never gave testimony, the records still classified. Most cases on this archive are here because this section is substantial.
Primary material itself — document scans, photographs, transcripts, dossiers — linked directly where it's publicly available. Where it isn't, we say so, and we name the archive or agency that holds it.
Events in chronological order with sources. Investigators work timelines because sequence reveals causation and contradiction in ways narrative does not.
Internal links to other AnomalyDesk files that connect — same era, same agency, same individuals, same pattern. Cases on this archive are usually not isolated.
A full bibliography. We link to primary documents wherever they exist on government archives, university libraries, or open repositories. Secondary sources are labeled as such.
Every claim of fact links to its source. If we can't source a claim, we either don't make it or we label it as unverified. The footer of every case file contains a complete source list with primary documents prioritized over secondary commentary.
Inside each file, claims carry tags: Verified for material with primary documentary support, Claimed for assertions made by named parties without independent confirmation, Unverified for material we couldn't substantiate, and Disputed for points where credible sources contradict each other. Readers shouldn't have to guess what's evidence and what's speculation.
The phrase "case closed" doesn't appear on this site without a verifiable closure. Dyatlov Pass is not solved. Roanoke is not solved. The Mary Celeste is not solved. Saying otherwise would be entertainment, not investigation, and AnomalyDesk is in the second business.
When new documents are released, new testimony emerges, or new research changes the picture, the corresponding case file is updated and the date of revision is recorded. Older files are not left to drift out of sync with the public record.
We make errors. When a reader points one out and it holds up, the file is corrected and the correction is logged at the bottom of the page rather than quietly edited.
If there's a case you think belongs on AnomalyDesk, or a case that's already here and contains an error, email hello@anomalydesk.com. Include the source material if you have it. Suggestions with primary documents attached get prioritized; suggestions with only secondary commentary get reviewed but take longer.
Corrections are logged at the bottom of the case page with the date of the change. We don't credit the reader by default to protect privacy; if you'd like credit, ask in the email and we'll include your name or handle.
AnomalyDesk is supported by display advertising and a small number of affiliate links to books and primary-document collections sold by third-party retailers. Affiliate links are disclosed inline. No agency, institution, or organization funds this site or has editorial input. If that ever changes, this page will say so.
Email: hello@anomalydesk.com
Corrections, suggested cases, source tips, and licensing inquiries all welcome at the same address.