Ancient civilizations did not describe history as a clean beginning. Egypt spoke of the Elders, rulers from a First Time that came before the dynastic order. Sumer divided history into before and after the Flood, treating civilization not as an invention, but as a restoration. Across South America, monuments and traditions remember teachers who arrived after destruction, then vanished again. For centuries, these accounts were treated as isolated myths. Now, Antarctica keeps entering the same frame. Not as proof, but as a convergence point. A continent sealed by ice, governed by treaties, and largely beyond direct inspection. As satellite imagery, disclosure culture, and renewed interest in ancient timelines collide, Antarctica has become impossible to ignore. This is not about resolving the mystery. It is about documenting why the same patterns keep resurfacing, and why the oldest civilizations may have been pointing backward, not forward.
The investigation continues.