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Abandoned history can be beautiful. Urban explorers have sneaked into dead shopping malls at night. Old houses frozen in time have been found full of treasures of the past. Even this old Kmart, documented as it slowly closed down over a number of months, could be described as fascinating. So when we stumbled upon a picture that purportedly showed a creepy abandoned train tunnel, we couldn't resist investigating if it were real. The picture appeared in an online advertisement below a video on a news website. It was hosted by the Taboola advertising platform and read: The Creepiest Things People Found on a Hike. Readers who clicked the photograph were led to a lengthy slideshow story. We've often found pictures in such online advertisements to be doctored. However, in this case, it's true that the picture showed an abandoned train tunnel. However, it wasn't a still photograph. Rather, it was a screenshot that was sourced from a video published by the NEPA Trains YouTube channel: The video was published on March 4, 2019, as was a Reddit thread with a photograph from inside the tunnel. We reached out to the man who shot the video, who only identified himself to us as Max. He told us that the abandoned train tunnel was in Wyoming County, Pennsylvania. I heard about that tunnel from some family, so went to check it out, he said. He also told us he had no idea that advertisers were using a screenshot from his video: Online advertisements that lure readers to lengthy slideshow stories often have one goal: make more money on the ads displayed during the slideshow than it cost to run the initial ad in the first place. This is known as arbitrage. For example, we recently found an advertisement that led to a story that required more than 225 clicks to reach the end. During the video, Max described the history of the tunnel at the 4:46 mark: He also shared this page that contained more details: https://nepatrains.org/museum/train-tunnel-43/ Max nicknamed the abandoned tunnel Train Tunnel 43 for reference on his website. As far as he knows the tunnel has no official name. It was described as 2,200 feet (671 meters) long, 175 feet (53 meters) deep, and it was opened in 1854 and closed in 1915. We have previously reported on a few other claims about trains, including if placing a penny on the tracks would cause a train to derail, if a man was indeed evading police when he jumped his motorcycle over a train, and if a train car was carrying COVID-19.
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