Charles Fort, the original anti-science skeptical-of-everything and at the same time too-credulous collector of strange facts and events, I've a long time kept an eye peeled for his works, none forthcoming, and so finally read his "Book of the Damned" online at Project Gutenberg. Link provided at the end.
Now this, a list - long, with notes as to sources, with everything that (in his view) flies in the face of science. He refutes any attempts to explain away unusual events by science, instead preferring to come up with even stranger and more imaginative explanations of his own - for example, Star Jelly - of which he gives numerous examples (a strange jelly like protoplasm sometimes found falling or upon the ground after meteoric events), and any odd sky-falls - large hail, rains of fish, frogs, what nots, on an adjacent place near to the earth but invisible, the "Super-Sargasso Sea" or Genesistrine, and while a good many of his sources do demand extraordinary explanations, a great many do not.
While he himself is positively feverish with imagination he doesn't allow that other people may have been as well.
There's the impossible rains and sky falls, atmospheric phenomena, thunderstones and thunder-axes, sky arrows, sky axes, thunder-teeth, Nostoc, all the craziness reported throughout human history, impossible rains, atmospheric phenomenon, thunderstones, thunder-axes, sky arrows, sky-axes, thunder-teeth, Nostoc, the IYNKICIDU of Philadelphia, Cyclorea, his confusing of staurolites, a mineral, as evidence of a tiny race of fairies, Monstrator, Elvera, the Vitrification of Ancient Forts, extra-telluric, marvelling over extreme weather events (now becoming commonplace), hailstones nucleated on frogs, Algol, Planet “Neith”, Melanicus, celestio-metathesis, his “other worlds” hypothesis, quake lights, Super-Tamerlanes, bird-falls from the sky (poisoned food, now largely attributed to glass skyscrapers), blood rain, Stone of Tarbes, the wheels of light and spokes seen upon the sea by captains and sailors, sea monsters, recalling: “those who go down to the sea in ships”; otherwise extraordinary events now made explicable, but we have our own inexplicable dark matter, quantum action at a distance, light discerning the slit, etc.
"Still the Dominants are suave very often, or are not absolute gods, and the way attention was led away from this subject is an interesting study in quasi-divine bamboozlement.”
His prose style, well, somewhere between incredulous, manic, rattling a fist against an establishment (science), world (god) that he can make no sense of, no an easy read, but filled with interesting ideas, and some worth more considering...
Oh, and if you ever have heard the term - "Fortean", it derives from him, applying to situations, events, objects, that in themselves appear inexplicable.
A short bio: https://skepdic.com/fortean.html
read online here: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/22472/22472-h/22472-h.htm