34. Henry Hudson
Henry Hudson was a renowned English explorer named towns, bridges, rivers, bays, straits, and others, though he didn’t seem to work for a very nice man. He’s starving, half-frozen, and homesick crew became so restless while exploring that they mutinied after several months due to their unwillingness to seek ice. The remaining crewmen returning to England were arrested and charged with Hudson’s murder but escaped without being punished for lack of details surrounding their captain’s death.
35. Azaria Chamberlain
The most notorious missing case in Australian history might be Azaria Chamberlain. You’ve probably heard the famous phrase, “a dingo ate my baby,” and that’s what made it famous. When her parents camped outback in 1980, Azaria Chamberlain, who was only nine weeks old, disappeared. The mother, Linda Chamberlain, was tried and convicted of murdering her young baby daughter and sentenced to life imprisonment. However, after serving for three years, a piece of baby’s clothing was found in a dingo’s lair, by chance. The lair was located near the campsite where baby Azaria had gone missing.