11.3 END OF OCCUPATION AND DURATION OF GC OBLIGATIONS
The status of belligerent operation ends when the conditions for its application are no longer met. Certain GC obligations with respect to occupied territory continue for the duration after the general close of military operations.
(media.greatawakening.win)
🧐 Research Wanted 🤔
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For Pete's sake. I have a 1978 book by Eliot Porter, "Antarctica," that includes photographs of the dry valleys discovered by Scott. This is not some hidden secret, though there are plenty of ignorant people out there.
No evidence of any ex-Nazi submarine glacial caves, and plenty of reason to doubt they could ever have existed. Kind of hard to sail into the hard continental rock mass. Nor any reason to think Nazi subs went this way.
You have to realize that the environment inside a WW2-era sub is dictated by the temperature of the surrounding water. The polar seawater has a temperature near 0 deg C (32 deg F). We normally reckon someone to have a poor survival prospect if they are dumped into water at 50 deg F. The crew on a submarine could not easily tolerate such temperatures. (They were not nuclear submarines with plenty of power available for heating.)
They were not dry there were warm water lakes there first of all caused by the geothermal heat.
You have to remember how massive Antarctica is they have not even scratched the surface, when you think how few people have been there compared to its vast size the idea we would just know where everything is unlikely, its larger than the us and mexico and has a 1mile to 3mile thick ice sheet on the top of it we have no idea of what is under there or at least not publicly known.
Also 80% of the ocean is unmapped so we have no idea about most of it especially deep underwater.
Also they are never going to tell you there is anything there as submarines and related stuff is kept a secret as they use the underwater caverns and trenches to hide subs in and sneak about you would have to go and have a look for yourself in your own sub :).
But it makes perfect sense that there are large caverns under the ice as there is pretty much everywhere else on earth, the whole earth is like a honeycomb of caverns.
The environment inside a WW2 sub as far as i know was hot and sweaty to the point it was pretty much unbearably hot when operating, so cold would not be a problem. Your talking about a 70m metal tube with 2x 2900kw engines on board it would be hot when its running.
Reading about modern subs are like this too but have AC in some areas to keep them cool and the electronics but the rest of the sub can get really hot like 30-35c. But some parts of the subs would be colder like the torpedo tubes for example.
I do hope that one day with all the Q stuff we actually get to know what happened and they start telling us the truth about all these things.
I wish i was around when people could ask Q questions to ask them, but at least Q said the aliens are real and its highest secrecy :).
Q said we are not alone....That does not translate into aliens are real.
lol wot that is exactly what it means :)
Face it they have admitted they have crashed alien craft and have been testing it, hell the navy has been seeing tic tac ufos for over 50 years.
Tons of sightings on radar and sonar, some traveling at supersonic speeds underwater for example and accelerating to 20,000mph in a matter of seconds.
The truth is out there kek
The dry valleys were dry. That was 1978. Go argue with the people who were there. Volcanic hot springs are not the norm, and they would probably be associated with the West Antarctic archipelago/peninsula, not the main continent.
Yes, Antarctica is massive. It is a continent. But we have "scratched" the surface enough to establish research bases around and about, with aerial and orbital imagery. Pretty featureless, so oddities would stick out. But the snowfall tends to bury things. We also know about things like Lake Vostok (look it up) and have plans to investigate further.
The German submarines were accustomed to operate in the North Atlantic, below a line stretching from Great Britain to Newfoundland. Along that like the water mean temperature was between 55 and 59 deg F. This is 23-27 degrees warmer than the water in the Antarctic. My house is nice and warm when it is summer, but not so comfortable during the winter. Likewise with submarines. A metal hull has no insulation. Submerged operation was on batteries, not on Diesel engines, so there was no engine heat. (The electric motors might have warmed the engine compartment, but that would be it.)
But you leap into a logical fallacy. Just because we do not know everything about Antarctica is no reason to imagine that things exist for which there is no evidence. What underwater caverns and trenches? How do you propose that WW2-era submarines could navigate through underwater passages like Captain Nemo? They did not have imaging sonar. It is sheer fantasy.
I was taking about how there are caverns underground which are warm enough to live in, i then showed you that there is a 300sq area with warm lakes which are not dry watch the short video you can see it for yourself. Also its hardly a big deal that there would be caverns that are warm its the same pretty much everywhere all caves and underground tend to be at a stable temperature that could be livable.
Also there are 90 odd volcanoes under Antarctica that they have found so far, and there is geothermal heat down there too which is melting the ice underneath. which further proves my point that its possible that there are caverns and you could live in them.
As i said Submarines tend to be hot really hot, subs have AC because they are so hot. They also have do have insulation mostly to stop the moisture from condensing. Old WW2 subs are also hot maybe be a bit colder in the colder waters but still you not going to be freezing its like a well known fact that WW2 subs were hot sweaty and really unpleasant to be in, with the engine rooms being like 100f or 37c. Even the WW2 U-boats had air conditioning because of the heat, which just about managed to work in the colder regions but would barely be enough in warmer regions and said to be like hell. So you idea that its going to be cold in there does not hold water pardon the pun :).
Also at depth the temp is generally cold no matter where you are so all subs would face colder temp just for the fact that they are submerged so although the surface temperature varies as you go deeper the differences are not so much as the sun cannot penetrate that far into the water.
The main electric motors were even bigger than the engines being 3700kw each so plenty of heat generated and generally they would run submerged when needed as the range submerged is like 300miles so they generally would be alternating between surfaced and submerged but submerged they would pop back up every few days to recharge the batteries. Silent running motors were like 166kw each, but only used for sneaking about before an attack or running away from one.
Again your talking about a 70m metal tube with several thousands of KW's of heat being produced, from engines, motors and batteries when being discharged.
Also the germans were really advanced with there subs at the end of the war stuff like radar absorbent materials that the allies were only beginning to understand, they also had passive sonar in the nose of the later subs. Could dive to 240-280m too.
It makes perfect sense that there are caverns under the ice as everywhere else in the world is the same, its hardly radical to suggest this and if there were a passage into Antarctica from outside and below who the hell would know its not like everyone has there own sub and as i have said before everything about sub warfare is secret so they are hardly likely to tell the truth if there was one.
How do you think they navigated anywhere underwater in the first place just guessing and bumping into things lol, of course they could navigate in a large cavern big enough for a sub to fit in using distance time bearings etc same as they have always done would not be easy but could be done.
Modern subs have more accurate navigation but still use a lot of the same methods as they did in WW2.
If Q is right we should start to know the truth about a lot of things that were kept hidden and there has always been a lot of secrecy with Antarctica.
You haven't dealt at all with the specific problems I mentioned; you've just repeated yourself. A 25-30-degree difference (colder) between North Atlantic and Antarctic seawater temperature is a big deal when it comes to conductive heat loss. The water is essentially an infinite heat sink and has a high conductivity (the submarine hull is about 100 times more conductive for the same temperature difference). Arm-waving is inferior to numbers.
The volcanoes are at the perimeter of the continent. They may make the surface warmer, or promote melting, but they are not the source of caverns. That is just imagination.
There is no imaging sonar. The undersea navigation to date has been on the basis of fathometers and carefully surveyed charts. There was recently a collision that occurred of a U.S. sub with an uncharted or poorly-charted seamount. You don't deliberately "bump into things" in a submarine; it can be fatal. They do not enter underwater tunnels or caverns---no assurance of an exit. That idea comes out of Jules Verne and Edgar Rice Burroughs.
What secrecy? That is pure paranoia. How could you know that something is secret, unless you knew what it was and that it was secret? Where do you get that information? The fact that you can't, is not proof of secrecy---it is only lack of evidence of anything. You are laboring in a delusion.