NASA detects ‘MASSIVE anomaly’ below Antarctica sparking SHOCK Nazi WW2 claim

A NASA satellite detected a “gravity anomaly” below the ice of Antarctica, sparking outrageous conspiracies of a secret underground Nazi base from World War Two. The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) was a joint mission of NASA and the German Aerospace Centre that ran from March 2002 to October 2017. By measuring gravity anomalies, GRACE showed how mass is distributed around the planet and how it varies over time.

However, one discovery in Antarctica has received far more attention than the rest of the mission. 

In 2006, a team of researchers led by Ralph von Frese and Laramie Potts used GRACE data to discover a 300-mile-wide anomaly below the ice. 

The team determined this to be a massive impact crater buried below the ice for millions of years, likely caused by an asteroid.

However, conspiracy theorists have long disputed this to be fact, claiming there is insufficient evidence to prove their claims. 

Tyler Glockner, who runs YouTube channel secureteam10, instead believes something was and still is buried deep below the ground. 

The conspiracy theorist revealed in 2016: “Antarctica is shrouded in mystery. 

“Secret Nazi bases were allegedly built there during World War Two, with some evidence showing entrances around the continent. 

“In 1991 the KGB released previously classified documents that shed light on the infamous Operation Highjump that showed the US Navy went on countless missions to Antarctica. 

“Organised by Admiral Richard E. Byrd in the 1940s, the operation used more than 4,000 men, 13 ships and 33 aircrafts and the public reason was to research Antarctica. 

“But the true purpose was to investigate an entrance found in the centre of the ice leading to an ‘inner Earth’.”

It is not the first time claims have surfaced over secret bases in the icy continent.

Back in February 2018, a heat map published by GPS tracking company Strava sparked a frenzy among conspiracists over what appeared to be a number of buildings below the snow.

source: express.co.uk