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Has anyone actually been to the ice wall?

Question: Has anyone actually been to the ice wall?

Answer: Yes. Early explorers inadvertently traveled the perimeter of the entire wall.

"In the ball-Earth model Antarctica is an ice continent which covers the bottom of the ball from 78 degrees South latitude to 90 and is therefore not more than 12,000 miles in circumference. Many early explorers including Captian Cook and James Clark Ross, however, in attempting Antarctic circumnavigation took 3 to 4 years and clocked 50-60,000 miles around. The British ship Challenger also made an indirect but complete circumnavigation of Antarctica traversing 69,000 miles. This is entirely inconsistent with the ball model." (200 Proofs Earth is Not a Spinning Ball, proof #42, Eric Dubay)  

Others, such as Admiral Richard E. Byrd, have participated in multiple exploration expeditions1 to "Antarctica," which we understand now to be the outer ice wall/shelf on the flat earth.

The "Antarctic Treaty" (1961) was established under the guise of environmental protection to make "Antarctica" (the ice shelf) off-limits to the general public.


1 Operation Highjump, Operation Deep Freeze, etc.


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