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McMurdo Station – Cold Hub of Hot Secrets
By Marivel Guzman | Akashma News
Key Anomalies:

2012 Rerouted Navy Flight: Officially documented diversion with hidden manifest, linked to military-grade EM shielding.
Repeated magnetic pulses: Clocked exactly a year apart, aligning with HAARP testing intervals.
Acoustic anomaly triangulation: Documented by Stanford scientists as “artificial harmonic layers” beneath Vostok.
Speculative Crosslink – Operation Freeze (Greenland Controversy): A previously classified operation in Greenland involved the construction of subterranean chambers under the guise of “permafrost research.” Declassified documents hinted that these were used for testing deep-energy waveforms. What if McMurdo is Antarctica’s mirror?

Historical Interlude: The McMurdo–Deep Freeze Timeline
1955: The United States launches Operation Deep Freeze, a Cold War-era military mission led by the Navy to establish permanent presence in Antarctica.
1956: In tandem with Deep Freeze, McMurdo Station is constructed on the southern tip of Ross Island. Officially a scientific outpost, it quickly becomes the largest research facility in Antarctica—complete with airstrips, surveillance capabilities, and underground infrastructure.
1957–1958: During the International Geophysical Year, McMurdo becomes a hub for global scientific cooperation—but also a key listening post for U.S. strategic interests.
Why It Matters:
McMurdo was never just about science. Built during a military operation, during the nuclear age, at the height of geopolitical paranoia, its origins frame everything that followed—from seismic experiments to magnetic anomaly research.
