There are actually three criteria by which a closed question can be placed into the reopen review queue:
- An edit is made to the body of the question, within 5 days of closure. The edit can be made either by the author, or by a third-party (provided that the third-party was not involved in the question's closure).
- Someone casts a flag or vote to reopen the question.
- The question is sufficiently popular, as determined by the score of the question itself, the score of the top answer, or the number of views per month (although these specific popularity criteria may have changed since they were first documented by Shog9).
None of the questions you reviewed were edited or flagged since the time of their closure by a moderator, but they were popular questions, and that's why the system questioned their closure.
I am conflicted on whether or not this "popularity" criteria is a good idea, but it makes some degree of sense. Some commenters have suggested that a moderator-involved closure should be exempt from community review via this route, but I have to disagree on that. If it's a good idea to have the closure of popular questions double-checked, then that should be equally true when a moderator was involved, if not more true, since moderators have a binding vote. Besides the fact that, if a moderator really wants something gone, never to come back, they can delete it.