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Antarctica - The "Outer Space" Beyond the Ice Wall Surrounding Our World

"Strangely enough, there is an area left in the world today an area as big as the United States that’s never been seen by a human being.”~Admiral Byrd

· archived 5/20/2026, 10:23:20 PMscreenshotcached html
Antarctica - The "Outer Space" Beyond the Ice Wall Surrounding Our World
Antarctica – The “Outer Space” Within the Ice Wall Surrounding Our World “Strangely enough, there is an area left in the world today an area as big as the United States that’s never been seen by a human being.” ~Admiral Byrd Sorry, Antarctica is Closed Scientists Are PANICKING About What NASA Found Under Antarctic Ice “Our journey begins with a man named Richard E. Byrd or more commonly known as Admiral Byrd. He was a highly decorated service member achieving the Medal of Honor and had an unquenchable thirst for exploring the unknown. This drive sent him to Antarctica numerous times, but the one expedition of interest is “Operation High Jump” (1946–1947). For this mission he was supported by the US Navy, giving him plenty of ships, boats, aircraft, and personnel to accomplish his goal. Well, he found something in Antarctica and in an interview gave an account of what he saw. Here are a few quotes pulled from that interview, “Strangely enough, there is an area left in the world today an area as big as the United States that’s never been seen by a human being.” Byrd said he found this area as he moved further into Antarctica and even went on to say, “It’s an untouched reservoir of natural resources”. This isn’t the desolate wasteland of ice and snow that we typically think about when we imagine Antarctica, but according to the admiral if you travel far enough inland that is what you’ll see. Now unfortunately we cannot trust everything Byrd said as he was a Freemason, but it has been reported that he lost plane after plane due to some invisible barrier. Not too long after this started taking place did the expedition end, six months ahead of schedule mind you.“ Antarctic History – Click To Enlarge Antarctic History Timeline – Click to Enlarge 1908 – Nimrod Expedition (Secret Society Expedition?) – They Knew Something. British Imperial Antarctic Expedition Pictures 1 Ernest Shackleton Nimrod – 1907-1909 1946 – Operation High Jump – Discovery of the Ice Wall Rim/Shoreline of Our World Lake. THE SECRET LAND – Operation High Jump – Antarctica Expedition 1947 Man Says; ‘I Have Seen The Ice Wall!’ 1955 – Operation Deep Freeze – Discovery of The Firmament Skydome: The Firmly Solid Firmament 1958 – NASA Founded – Faking The Globe to Hide Biblical Earth NASA – The Actor’s Guild of The Freemason Forked Tongue Flat Earth Clues – Directors Cut – Mark Sargent – Under the Dome – They are hiding GOD NASA’s Inconvenient Truth: It’s NOT Too Big a Conspiracy! 1962 – Operations Dominic (“of The Lord”) and Fishbowl (Together: Fishbowl of the Lord) Operation Fishbowl of the Lord (Dominic+Fishbowl) – 1962 Oh look – is that the Firmament? Let’s nuke it. While I certainly understand man’s need for adventure into the unknown in search of answers and “new frontiers,” the more I look into this subject, it appears that Antarctica had been an obsession for quite some time. But prior to the advances of the mid-20th century, few actually made it there. It wasn’t until we were able to build better ships and the equipment needed to cut through the ice that such a trip was even possible. But why the big push for this “end of the earth” anyway? Could it be that man was after more than mere adventure and the discovery of new land? What if they were actually testing an ancient theory? What if they were trying to access Heaven through the ground floor door instead of the sky dome windows? What if the ultimate goal was to once again “reach into heaven” and… kill God? Sounds crazy? Let’s see… Prior to the 20th Century AD, there were a number of expeditions to Antarctica worthy of note: Pre-19th century: 7th century — Ui-te-Rangiora claimed to have sighted southern ice fields. 13th century — Polynesians settle Auckland Islands (50° S)[1][2][3][4] 1501–1502 — Gonçalo Coelho and Amerigo Vespucci potentially sail to (52° S) 1522 — Ferdinand Magellan – first circumnavigation discovers Strait of Magellan (54° S) 1578 — Francis Drake discovers Drake Passage 1599 — Dirk Gerritsz – potentially sails to (64° S) 1603 — Gabriel de Castilla – potentially sails to (64° S) 1615 — Jacob le Maire and Willem Schouten first to sail around Cape Horn cross (56° S) 1619 — Garcia de Nodal expedition – circumnavigate Tierra del Fuego and discover Diego Ramirez Islands (56°30′S 68°43′W) 1675 — Anthony de la Roché discovers South Georgia (54°15′00″S 36°45′00″W), the first ever land discovered south of the Antarctic Convergence 1698–1699 — Edmond Halley sails to (52° S) 1720 — Captain George Shelvocke – sails to (61° 30′ S) 1739 — Jean-Baptiste Charles Bouvet de Lozier – discovers Bouvet Island (54°26′S 3°24′E) 1771 — James Cook – HM Bark Endeavour expedition 1771–1772 — First French Antarctic Expedition – led by Yves-Joseph de Kerguelen-Trémarec discovers Kerguelen Islands (49°15′S 69°35′E) 1772–1775 — James Cook – sails HMS Resolution crossing Antarctic Circle in January 1773 and December 1773. On 30 January 1774 he reaches 71° 10′ S, his Farthest South, coming within about ...