Australian Esoteric Australian Esoteric Issue 4 | Page 21

“A naval officer tells us what he remembers, including seeing a huge opening in the ice in a no-fly area they were crossing with a medical emergency on board. Then he ferried a group of scientists who had disappeared for two weeks and has specifically been warned not to refer again to this subject. As he put it, “they looked scared.” When they returned to McMurdo, their gear was isolated and they were flown back to Christchurch, New Zealand in a special plane. He discusses what he saw and experienced in detail. This is the most provocative story about what is going on in Antarctica ever presented anywhere.” Credit http://antarctica.greyfalcon.us/pictures/hole2.jpg (From: https://www.ancient-code.com/the-great-mystery-continues-what-theyre-not-telling-us-about- antarctica/?utm_content=social- hzm7l&utm_medium=social&utm_source=SocialMedia&utm_campaign=SocialPilot ) Another report worth listening to is by Linda Moulton Howe on You Tube (Earth Files): https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=101&v=GMybJ-HGUOo To further illustrate that we are really only just beginning to learn the secrets that the mysterious continent at the bottom of the globe guards so jealously, we examine these news updates recently found in the media. Antarctica in the News Volcanoes Researchers have discovered what looks to be the largest volcanic region on Earth, revealing an invisible network of almost 100 unknown volcanoes lying hidden beneath the Antarctic ice sheet. A remote survey of what's called the West Antarctic Rift System uncovered 138 volcanoes in total – 91 of which had never been detected before. The discovery, along a region reaching approximately 3,500km between Antarctica's Ross Ice Shelf and the Antarctic peninsula – suggests there could be many, many more than scientists thought. The identified volcanoes extend in height from 100 metres to 3,850 metres, and while the researchers don't yet know if any of them are active, it's important we find out, because if one were to erupt, it could heat and melt the ice above it, potentially raising sea levels. Antarctic bacterium has one of the biggest proteins ever found A bacterium living in the icy-cold waters of Antarctica manages to survive by gripping on to the ice surface. At 600 nanometres, it is one of the biggest proteins for which the structure has ever been identified - it is a giant compared with most proteins of between 2 and 15 nanometres in size. Pathogenic bacteria attach themselves in the same way to human cells where they cause infections. Now that we know how they attach themselves, we should be able to find a way of preventing this. It had always been thought that this protein was contained in the body of the Marinomonas promoryiensis bacterium and helps prevent the