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THE SECRET LAND ЁЯПФ WHAT ADMIRAL BYRD DISCOVERED

21 рд╡рд┐рдЪрд╛рд░реЛрдВ┬╖ 05/09/24
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тБгFrankie Stockes - THE SECRET LAND: Admiral ByrdтАЩs men discovered a тАШwarm oasisтАЩ in Antarctica, with тАШwarm water lakesтАЩ and shores that тАШare free of ice and snow.тАЩ The hills are full of тАШvast depositsтАЩ of coal and тАШimportant minerals.тАЩ What else did they find?

Source: https://twitter.com/realStocke....s/status/17885457082

Thumbnail: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/0....6/09/insider/1929-by

Not those Sulzbergers, you may have thought on May 20 when perusing a two-page map of Antarctica in The Times. There, just to the left of the enormous Ross Ice Shelf, was тАЬSulzberger Bay.тАЭ What were the Sulzbergers doing down near the South Pole? WasnтАЩt their family estate in Westchester County? Could this be a misprint? Or an in-joke?

It was neither. Sulzberger Bay does indeed take its name from Arthur Hays Sulzberger, the publisher of The New York Times from 1935 to 1961, who not only supported two Antarctic expeditions by Rear Adm. Richard E. Byrd (Commander Byrd at the time), but counted the admiral among his friends. In the 1920s, before taking over as publisher from his father-in-law, Mr. Sulzberger helped make The Times an advocate of aviation and exploration.

Admiral Byrd was so indebted to the Ochs-Sulzberger family and The Times that he went on a naming spree in December 1929 тАФ summer in Antarctica тАФ as he charted newly found features in Marie Byrd Land. (That would be Mrs. Byrd.) Besides Sulzberger Bay, he also designated:

тАв Adolph S. Ochs Glacier, since shortened to Ochs Glacier, at the foot of Block Bay. Mr. Ochs was the publisher of The Times at the time of the expedition.
тАв Mount Iphigene, a 4,200-foot peak west of Ochs Glacier, named for Mr. OchsтАЩs daughter, who was married to Mr. Sulzberger.
тАв Marujupu Peak, a 3,000-foot-high nunatak emerging from the Ochs Glacier. Marujupu (ma-ROO-joo-poo) is an acronym using the first two letters of the names of each of Iphigene and Arthur SulzbergerтАЩs children, in birth order: Marian, Ruth, Judith and Punch, as Arthur Ochs Sulzberger was called.
тАв Birchall Peaks, a small group west of Mount Iphigene. Frederick T. Birchall was the managing editor of The Times when Byrd was exploring Antarctica. Besides helping finance Admiral ByrdтАЩs first expedition, the Times dispatched its own correspondent, Russell Owen, to cover the trek. He spent a year on the assignment and was immortalized at Owen Peak, originally Mount Russell Owen.

A stirring memento of the Byrd-Sulzberger friendship is a 1921 Morgan silver dollar. It is framed together with a short narrative written by Arthur Hays Sulzberger, describing how the coin was passed back and forth between the men, beginning with Admiral ByrdтАЩs Arctic expedition of 1926 and trans-Atlantic flight of 1927.

тАЬBefore leaving on his first South Pole adventure, Byrd asked me for the dollar,тАЭ Mr. Sulzberger wrote. тАЬI put it in this plain blue envelope with a simple notation. It was never removed from the envelope and was taken across the South Pole in it.тАЭ

тАЬAgain on his second South Polar trip [1934] the Admiral asked me for the dollar. It accompanied him on all of his flights and was with him at the advance base. In turn it was duly brought back to me. тАЬ

тАЬFinally on this third trip to Antarctica [1939-40] тАФ this time for the United States Government тАФ Admiral Byrd once again claimed his dollar and, as usual, returned it.тАЭ

тАЬA dollar can go very far in the proper hands.тАЭ

Very far тАФ as Admiral Byrd told Mr. Sulzberger by letter after returning the coin in October 1940. During the third expedition, the admiralтАЩs ship had become icebound in Sulzberger Bay.

тАЬThere did not seem to be any chance of getting out,тАЭ Admiral Byrd wrote, тАЬbut with this luck piece and a seaplane, we managed, by zigzagging and pounding the ice, to break our way through to open water. Perhaps without this luck piece we would still be in your inhospitable Bay.

тАЬYou must take good care of this silver piece,тАЭ the admiral continued. тАЬIf you should lose it I would be sunk, for I would not dare to go on a hazardous undertaking without it. Devotedly, Dick.тАЭ

Wherever Admiral ByrdтАЩs soul may be these days, he need not worry. The silver dollar is safely in the hands of Arthur Sulzberger Jr. You know. Of the Antarctic Sulzbergers.

тБгcolubris posted:


There is no universe. The word universe is not in the King James Bible. We live in a flat and enclosed world that has four corners, that are longer from east to west (Psalms 103:12) (around 33,404 statute miles - level, from corner to corner, as traveling this over ground, it is slightly longer), than they are from north to south (around 21,330 statute miles - level, from corner to corner). The "sea" (1 Kings 7:23, 2 Chronicles 4:2) is flat (around 14,086 statute miles in diameter), and from the Antarctic sea coast, the land rises (slightly) (Ecclesiastes 1:7) to "the four corners of the earth" (Isaiah 11:12, Revelation 7:1). The open "firmament" (Genesis 1:15,17,20) of heaven, that the both (Genesis 1:16) around six feet wide (Genesis 37:9,10, Revelation 12:1), few inches thick (Isaiah 3:18 KJV) sun and moon are in, along with the fig sized (Revelation 1:16,20, 2:1, 6:13, 12:1, Isaiah 34:4) stars, extends from sea level all the way up to around 440 statute miles (the top of the so called ionosphere, or thermosphere) above Jerusalem, the center of the world (Psalms 107:3, Ezekiel 5:5, 38:12, Luke 13:29, Revelation 20:9) (From there it gradually descends to the four corners of the earth). There are two so called Geographical South Poles, one in the north, that Amundsen and Scott discovered (navigated to by going so called due south of Argentina, Chile, Hawaii, New Zealand, and Australia), and one in the south, due south of Inhambane Province, Mozambique (as most people go to it from Cape Town, South Africa). The sun, moon, and stars near them pass over the north at around 8 miles above sea level, and begin to rise, every day, on Jerusalem, in the east to around 29 statute miles above sea level when they are due south of her. From there, they begin to go down, all the way until they set on her in the west, at a height of around 8 miles above sea level, and begin to go over the north again. The open firmament of heaven is always magnifying the sun, moon, and stars, the more, the further away they are, refracting them up from the horizon, unless they are on the horizon or directly above you, and placing them in a direction away from you, depending on where you are in the world - as that is why Sigma Octantis, and the stars near it, appear to be circling clockwise (looking up at them) above both so called Geographical South Poles - because of how the kaleidoscope acting firmament presents them, that is longer from east to west, than it is from north to south (as they are really the fastest moving stars of all of the stars).

Above the firmament are the "waters" (Genesis 1:6,7) above. And above that, the "heavens" (2 Peter 3:5) above, go all the way up to the top (around 24,252 statute miles high, above sea level) of the pyramid - the top of the highest heaven (Ephesians 4:10). The Great Pyramid of Giza, called Khufu, or Cheops, is the (outside) model of our world and the heavens above. The rest of the pyramids there (Matthew 25:14, Luke 19:12,15), are the models of the other heavens outside ours (Jeremiah 32:20).

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