When Perry posted: “Who made the code?” Many responded in nervousness and frustration. Here are some man-made mysteries (forget about God-made codes), which the scientists can simply puzzle over.
1) The still un-deciphered Harappan script.
2) The illustrated Voynich manuscript written in a completely unknown script. The plant species that it illustrates do not match any known species either. Is it a cipher-text or could it even be a handbook of alien alchemists? No one knows: although it has been carbon-dated to the 15th century, the codex, named after the book dealer who bought it in 1912, refuses to yield its mysteries.
3) There is no dearth of natural mysteries either. Michael Brooks, the New Scientist Editor, once tantalized his readers with a list of 13 things that don’t make sense. He includes Nocebo, a diagnosis of terminal disease that can come true even if its wrong; also Bloop, which was a series of sounds louder than any whale song heard in 1997 on US underwater monitoring equipment. It was never heard again.
4) Some old mysteries are beginning to yield new answers. For centuries, eyewitnesses have reported seeing strange bright lights in the sky just before or during earthquakes. Consistently dismissed as old wives tales, the phenomenon was taken seriously only after being filmed in Japan. A new hypothesis attributes it to rifts and faults and squeezing of plates leading to creation of light.
5) Now a slightly different subject—why do some animals behave better than man-made super-computers? Many animals escaped the great Asian tsunami on Boxing Day, 2004, catching (earlier than man-made equipments) the special vibrations coming from the depth of the earth. (http://www.thelivingmoon.com/45jack_files/03files/Tsunami_Can_Animals_Sense_Disasters.html)
"This is what the LORD says: "Let not the wise man boast of his wisdom or the strong man boast of his strength or the rich man boast of his riches, but let him who boasts boast about this: that he understands and knows me, that I am the LORD."--Jeremiah 9:23, 24.