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May 23, 2024 16 mins

George Noory and author Brad Olsen discuss his explorations of the continent of Antarctica, if there are secret Nazi bases or even an entrance to the center of the Earth in the area, plus the alternate history of structures supposedly built by giants in South America.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on
iHeartRadio and.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Welcome back to Coast to Coast George Nori with you
along with Brad Olsen. His website is linked up at
Coast tocoastam dot com. Brad, there are a lot of
megaliths underwater. How did they get there? What happened?

Speaker 3 (00:19):
That's a good question, George. How do you create a
megalith under the ocean? Well, that could only really happen
when the sea levels were much lower than they are,
and that's dating us back to at least twelve thousand
years ago, during the last Ice Age, when a lot
of these could have been created. So, like Graham Hancock says,

(00:40):
everything keeps getting dated, older and older and older. I
would say that's true with the megaliths too. They can't
be carbon dated. But when you look at the technology
that put into them, we're still playing ketchup trying to
match that technology today.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
How big are some of these underwater megaliths.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
Well, some of the bigger ones are in the Dimini roads.
It's an L shaped megalithic structure. Now, Mother Nature doesn't
create perfect right angles stacked up against each other, that's
a big one. Then there's another one in Yonaguni, which
is actually carved right out of the living rock that

(01:21):
for a long time National Geographic said, no way, that's
just a natural formation. But then they had to change
their mind because it was clearly carved right out of
the rock. And that's an island in the southern Okinawa
Islands of Japan, just north of Taiwan.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Lloyd Pie used to carry with him an elongated skull.
Remember that, Oh, I sure do, starchild yep absolutely. Now
what about these elongated skulls that have seen all around
the different areas of Central America.

Speaker 3 (01:54):
Yes, Central America, South America, here in North America as
well around the Black Sea region to China, even Southeast Asia. Now,
these elongated skulls are very unique. I've seen them in
a museum in the Sacred Valley of Peru. Their heads
are thirty percent larger than a human skull. And I'll

(02:18):
show the comparison to my talk. If you try to
bind a head or put a board on it and
wrap it up, yeah, you can change the structure of
a skull. What what you cannot do is add thirty
percent cranial capacity and thirty percent larger brain size, so
they're human like George, but they're not quite human. So

(02:41):
for example, they also have thirty percent larger eye sockets,
they don't have the central crack, the suture in the
front of the forehead, and their spinal cord comes up
into the body also thirty percent larger. So you do
the math. Thirty percent larger head, thirty percent larger body,

(03:04):
more cranial capacity, meaning they could be smarter than humans.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Yeah. Yeah, Are they alien?

Speaker 3 (03:14):
Well, that's what we were talking about earlier. Maybe they
were the offspring of the Ananaki the nephel Im, and
were they alien? Well, it seems so. We don't see
them walking around too much in the world today, but
maybe there are some that still exists. Now.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
There are some that say the culture of that time
forced them to elongate human skulls. I'm not sure about that.
What do you think?

Speaker 3 (03:39):
Yeah, I don't think the culture could do that either.
I've seen the exhibits, and I've studied some of the
tribal people like the Nez Pierce and the Flathead Indians
of Idaho. Yeah, and they did cranial deformation, but again,
you can't create thirty percent larger skull or brain matter.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
When did you go to Antarctica.

Speaker 3 (04:03):
I was down there five and a half years ago,
and it was a sailboat trip across the Drake Passage,
one of the stormiest seas in the world. Georgie. I
wouldn't recommend it to you or any of your listeners.
It's a really rough passage. I think I lost twenty
five pounds on that trip because I was seasick for

(04:24):
several days.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
Oh geez, they food down Oh yeah.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
It was dreadful. But once we were down there, it
was amazing. It's like you're not even on Earth. You're
on a frozen planet somewhere.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
What's the weather like, Well.

Speaker 3 (04:38):
It's mostly pretty cold. I mean we were wearing our
winter clothes and it was the middle of summer. However,
there are a couple of days when it did actually
get sunny and sunny enough to do the infamous polar plunge,
that is jumping in the ocean among the icebergs and
the penguins, just to say you did it, and I

(04:59):
did it three times.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
See anything unusual out there?

Speaker 3 (05:04):
So that was the thing, and we were looking for
anything of an antediluvian such as megalists, the pyramids poking
through the ice. Maybe anyone with knowledge of the three
massive ships that are down there that are intelligence agency
is nicknamed Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria. The way back

(05:24):
in the seventies, they known about these places, and I
think I've been able to pinpoint at least one of them,
which I'm going to bring up in my workshop at
Contact in the Desert. And do you remember when we
first talked about Antarcticon Beyond Belief, George, you were saying,
why did they need a big no fly zone over
the South Pole because nobody goes down there. There's no

(05:45):
flights down there, And I said, yeah, exactly, but there
is a big no fly zone, and that could be
the cover for a giant hole in the ice. That's
what was reported by Admiral Bird as an aviator, the
first Islot fly over the sal Pole, reported this and
wrote about it in his diary when he returned right

(06:07):
before the Battle of High Jump during Operation high Jump.

Speaker 2 (06:11):
Maybe that's truly journey to the center of the Earth.

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Huh, About as much as you could make, at least
without going under ground. You see, because upon the salth
Pole that is what's known as the Polar Plateau, and
the ice is two miles thick. Well. Antarctica is the
most volcanically active continent in the world. There's ninety one

(06:36):
known volcanoes, so the geothermal activity would have the propensity
of creating large domes under the ice. In fact, they're
still finding lakes and flowing rivers and even new life
forms that exist down there.

Speaker 2 (06:54):
And of course with gravity, you don't know, but you're
literally standing upside down.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
Yeah, you would know it, but I guess technically you are.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Would you go back?

Speaker 3 (07:06):
I would go back. In fact, I'm working with a
group called JC Cross of venture capital company I'm sorry
VC Cross, and we're looking to raise the money to
create a documentary which I would go down there and
this time be able to travel inside the continent. So,
for example, I'd like to go to those pyramids we've

(07:29):
seen on Ancient Aliens and other shows in the Ellsworth
Mountain range and just investigate it. Let's say, maybe it
is just a nun attack, which is an attractive mountain
poking through the ice. But what if it was manufactured
by some kind of intelligence. George, that's a game changer.
I think disclosure could come from Antarctica with any one

(07:50):
of these discoveries.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
They say the Nazis had an undersea base where Hitler
fled to it originally before he went to South America.

Speaker 3 (08:02):
Yeah, it's quite possible. Maybe Hitler didn't go directly to
Antarctica after the war, because there was reports of him
coming ashore at Mara Plata near Buenos Aires and then
going to a location that I visited on the trip
down to Antarctica. I went to all these reported Nazi hideouts,

(08:24):
including a town called Lafalda. And we've all heard of Bariloche.
That George is like stepping into a Barbarian town down there,
and everybody speaks German, and you can get some Wiener
schnetzel for lunch and scrudle for dessert. It's very Germanic
down there. And a lot of other top Nazis definitely

(08:45):
did escape, including Martin Borman, who kept popping up all
through the nineteen fifties, and he was the money man
for the Third Reich, which set up corporations and shell
companies and investments all over the place. And this is
what some researchers in the field called the Fourth Reich,

(09:06):
that it's more of an intelligence gathering rather than the
standing armies of Germany. That they were an intelligence group
with these vast resources, because a lot of money drained
out of Europe after World War Two, including many palettes
of gold and priceless artifacts and paintings. And Martin Borman

(09:28):
was the money man, he was controlling it all, and
they were making investments in other corporations, and of course
in America you had Project paper Clip bringing over these
Nazi scientists and officers who became integrated into our corporation
and government agencies too.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
They got us into space, didn't they.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
Well else Werner von Braun and Herban Oberet And when
asked where did Germany get all this technology so rapidly,
herman Orberitz said, well, we had help from our friends above.

Speaker 2 (10:01):
There's always been talk about that there's a map called
the Pirie Reece Map p I R IRIS. Oh yeah,
what makes it so unusual?

Speaker 3 (10:10):
Well, what's so unusual is not only was it created
only twenty years after Columbus made his first voyage, but
it shows the perfect outline of South America as well
as connecting down to Antarctica. But what makes the Pirie
Reef map. Really fascinating is it shows Antarctica before the

(10:32):
ice and now they're doing sonar radar across the Larsen
Ice shelf George, which had depicted on the Pirie Reef
map without ice, and finding those islands on the map
are under the ice. So it was clearly drawn, probably

(10:52):
from source maps. In fact that the liner notes of
the Purie Reef map it does say that the source
maps came from the library of Alexandria and Potomac, Greece,
so way back in the classical era that these maps
were handed down and many of them preserved in the

(11:13):
library of Alexandria, and I would dare to say maybe
some of them still exist in the Vatican library.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
That's interesting. And the map that shows these islands also
could only have been seen from above, right, Well, that's.

Speaker 3 (11:30):
Yeah, that's it. That's the other thing that's so peculiar
about it. And it shows the correct proportion of Western
Africa and eastern South America proportion meaning the size of
the Atlantic Ocean in between, So that too would have
best been surveyed from above.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
All these things that are happening on the planet bread,
why are we just beginning to find out what they are.
Why is it taken so long?

Speaker 3 (11:57):
Yeah, I think there was a concerted effort to disguise
all this evidence, and for example, with the giants, it
just didn't go along with the narrative. And even though
this evidence was being found, there's countless stories of the
Smithsonian Institute coming into giant digs and confiscating the bones
and they say they just threw them in the Atlantic Ocean,

(12:19):
just get them out of here. They just didn't want
to deal with it. So I think so much of
our history has just been manipulated. So we don't think
that there was this high tech civilization on the Earth,
for example, or these giants that once roam the earth.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
What is it brand that got you interested in all
these topics.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
Well, it's our real history. It's who we are as
a human race on this planet. And anytime there's a
form of censorship that goes against what I believe in,
and I know you too, because we're trying to just
we're just trying to get to the truth. We just
want to know what evidence is out there and piece
together this mosaic of who we are as humans on

(13:04):
this planet. And so I just want to I just
want disclosure. I just want to be revealed transparency in
all this evidence. And it takes people like you to
do coast to coast and speaking at these conferences to
get the word out to the mass amount of people.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
And so many people are interested in this.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
Oh, it's only going to keep growing, George Rich just
a tip of the iceberg, because this information is starting
to get out there and people are seeing it for themselves.
I'll tell you when I went to see those innglongated
skulls in South America. When you see it with your
own eyes, seeing is believing, and you don't go back
not saying, oh, well, now I don't believe in giants

(13:48):
or these elongated skulls. No, I saw it with my
own eyes. Of course, it's going to stay with me
for the rest of my life.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
Back to the plan of jars and laws. What's the
smallest jar that you saw?

Speaker 3 (14:01):
Spallst geez. I don't think there were any under a
meter and a half.

Speaker 2 (14:06):
They're all pretty big, aren't they.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
They're all really big.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Yeah, absolutely scattered all over the place. If you look
at them from the countryside, can you see them pop
up everywhere?

Speaker 3 (14:16):
Not really, because it's pretty hilly and Jungly. But the
one location called Site One where the World Heritage Museum
is and visitor center, there are well over one hundred intact.
Some are blown up and then there's those talk marks
from all the bombing craters. But I have the map,

(14:37):
and if I had more time, I could have rented
a motorcycle and gone driving around. Some of them are
on the top of hilltops, others are deep in the jungle.
But yeah, this one area of lows maybe one hundred
square miles. All the way around, they just pop up everywhere.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
Would you recommend that if people had the ability to
do explore, they should go to these places?

Speaker 3 (15:04):
Oh? Absolutely. Travel to me has been the biggest education
I've ever had. In fact, I started my career as
a travel writer. My very first book, called World Stompers,
was all about telling people how to do their own
trips inexpensively and safely and if you have to work
your way around the world to do it. And I
encourage it to everybody, especially young people right out of college.

(15:29):
Just do it while you have that opportunity, and it
will be such an eye opening opportunity.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
Where would you not go a brand.

Speaker 3 (15:39):
A war zone?

Speaker 2 (15:40):
Yeah, I don't blame you there now.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
I'm too big of a target for that.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
And unfortunately, there are too many of those war zones
all over the country and all over the planet huh yeah.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
And some countries they just won't let you in or
you might risk your life if you try to go
to Iran or some of these war torn countries in
the Middle East. Unfortunately, assist am not a good situation
right now.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at
one am Eastern and go to Coast to coastam dot
com for more

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