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Time travel 'proof' – Nike shoes and iPhone in 17th century before WW2 'time warp'

Daily Star 2 days ago

There have been several instances throughout history where it appears time travel must have been real, including the appearance of modern technology in 17th century artwork

Marty McFly was famed for it in Back To The Future and now new Disney+ movie The Greatest Hits sees Lucy Boynton play a woman with the ability to travel through time – by listening to certain songs.

It might not be music to the ears of boffins who have yet to prove dimension jumping is a real thing but there’s plenty of mysterious cases from history to suggest it might actually be real.

Here, Kim Carr steps back in time to look at curious tales of time travellers from history…

Click for more time travel stories from the Daily Star.

painting
Notice anything strange in this 17th century painting?

Great Scot!

Even the most seasoned pilot is no fan of gliding through the skies in dodgy weather but for RAF Air Marshal Sir Robert Victor Goddard it was more than turbulence he came across in 1939.

The senior commander during WW2 went across a disused air force base in the village of Drem, East Lothian and noted it was in a rough state with cows eating grass which had grown through cracks in the tarmac.

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Artwork by Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch from 1670 - what's he holding?

After heavy rain sent him off course he chose to go back in the direction of the base to regain focus. Looking down he found a renovated airfield with mechanics wearing blue overalls and four yellow planes on the runway, including a model he had never seen before.

It was thought Goddard had been in a time slip as four years later the airfield was up and running with RAF training planes now painted yellow instead of silver and air force mechanics swapping their tan overalls for blue.

Call me

Charlie Chaplin’s 1928 movie The Circus
Snap from Charlie Chaplin’s 1928 movie The Circus

A woman holding what appeared to be a mobile phone to her ear in the background of Charlie Chaplin’s 1928 movie The Circus caused a time travel riddle as the devices were not commonplace until 50 years later.

Meanwhile a 1930s photo also appeared to show a man holding a mobile to his ear in the middle of Union Square in New York. And artwork by Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch from 1670 seemingly showed a man from the past holding an iPhone.

Future mapped out

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When was the first Apple shop opened?!

Waiting to go through passport control at the airport is always painful but imagine what would happen if as they went to place a stamp immigration officers told you the country yours was issued from didn’t exist?

In July 1954 it’s said a man arriving at Tokyo International airport found himself in exactly this situation leading police to arrest him.

He claimed his hometown Taured was between France and Spain and was over 1,000 years old but the area he pointed to on a map was Andorra. Despite two guards outside his hotel room, the mystery man had disappeared by the next day.

Sneaker peeper

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Nike shoes? In a painting that predates the company by 300 years

The painting Portrait of a Boy by Dutch Master Ferdinand Bol left art fans baffled as the 17th century child appeared to be wearing shoes with a famous Nike white tick.

Despite being painted more than 300 years before Nike kicked their trainer making into action in 1964 it saw conspiracy theorists question whether the lad, thought to be Frederick Sluysken, the second cousin of the painter’s wife, had hopped into the future for his footwear.

Extra-terrestrial clock hop

930s photo also appeared to show a man holding a mobile to his ear in the middle of Union Square in New York
1930s photo appears to show a man holding a mobile to his ear in the middle of Union Square in New York

Former US army helicopter pilot Alex Collier claims to have travelled through time after being abducted by aliens in the eighties.

He said he was kept on their spaceship for three months and given a belt to wear so they could hear his thoughts and when he returned to Earth he had only been gone for 18 minutes. At a 2007 talk in Japan, Alex said: “Their own day is equivalent to 31 days on our world. They thought I wasn’t well because I kept having to take naps.

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