Disaster A Team of Scientists Is Trapped at Isolated Antarctic Base for 10 Months. 1 of Them Just Attacked and Threatened Others: Report - The group is currently stationed at a remote base in the continent in freezing temperatures, per reports

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A stock photo of the Royal Society Range of mountains in Antarctica.
Photo: Getty


A researcher at an isolated base in Antarctica sent a worrying email, accusing another team member of physical and sexual assault, as well as threatening to kill somebody, it's been reported.

An overwintering team, consisting of 10 members, is almost entirely cut off from the outside world at South Africa's Antarctica base amid harsh weather conditions, per South Africa's The Time. According to the U.K. Times, the group is stationed at the SANAE IV (South African National Antarctic Expedition) base located in Vesleskarvet, Queen Maud Land.

Last month, a team member sparked concern after sending an email about a person's "egregious" and "deeply disturbing" behavior, accusing them of physical and sexual assault, as well as threatening to kill somebody, the publication stated.

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A group picture of researchers from various science projects pictured at SANAE IV.
Photo: Alamy


"His behavior has become increasingly egregious, and I am experiencing significant difficulty in feeling secure in his presence,” the email read, per the outlet. “It is imperative that immediate action is taken to ensure my safety and the safety of all employees."

“Regrettably, [his] behavior has escalated to a point that is deeply disturbing. Specifically, he physically assaulted [name withheld], which is a grave violation of personal safety and workplace norms," the message continued, the outlet stated.

“Furthermore, he threatened to kill [name withheld], creating an environment of fear and intimidation. I remain deeply concerned about my own safety, constantly wondering if I might become the next victim,” the email reportedly added. The person who sent the email and the alleged attacker have not been publicly named.

The message reportedly stated "numerous concerns" about the person in question had allegedly been raised before the S. A. Agulhas II ship that brought them there had departed on its return journey, per the outlet. The journey from Cape Town is approximately 2,485 miles and takes around 10-15 days depending on the amount of ice the group hits on the way, per South Africa's The Times.

The Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE), which manages the South African National Antarctic Programme (SANAP), confirmed an investigation is underway regarding the email. Per AccuWeather, temperatures in the area are ranging this week from around 5 degrees Fahrenheit to around -7.6 degrees Fahrenheit.

“The department is responding to these concerns with the utmost urgency and have had a number of interventions with all parties concerned at the base,” DFFE communications chief Peter Mbelengwa said, per South Africa's The Times.

“A full investigation is being commissioned and the department will act accordingly in relation to any wrong conduct against any official that has misconducted themselves,” Mbelengwa added, per the outlet.

DFFE minister Dion George confirmed he'd seen the email, the publication stated.

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A group of researchers are pictured at SANAE IV.
Photo: Alamy


South Africa's The Times reported that the only way to leave the base right now would be "via emergency medical evacuation to a neighboring German base" around 186 miles away, citing two sources with inside knowledge.

DFFE's Mbelengwa told the outlet that tests had previously been done to "ensure the team can endure the psychological stress of isolation," per South Africa's The Times.

“In this instance, no negative outcomes were recorded in relation to all the overwinterers in Sanae, which forms a critical component of the department's risk assessment processes,” he said, according to the outlet.

"[They] are being taken through a thorough process and their various options are being discussed. During this unforeseen incident, the department is engaging with the professional that undertook the psychometric evaluation, to have the overwinterers reassessed and to assist with coping mechanisms during their time at the base, inclusive of conflict resolution strategies, interpersonal skills improvement as well as overall counseling and support," he continued.

The first South African National Antarctic Expedition (SANAE) departed in 1959, per the website. As well as SANAE IV, there is also one station each on the subantarctic islands Gough Island and Marion Island.

Professional explorer Alan Chambers, who completed a 700-mile skiing expedition to the South Pole in 2024, said of the Antarctica conditions, per the U.K.'s The Times, “From a psychological perspective it’s a very very lonely place. There’s very little interaction with humans or animals so if you’re in a camp or a research center you’re with those people for six months, if not a year."

“What I think it does, from a psychological point of view, is that everything becomes heightened. It’s all white — there’s no color, no noise and nothing you would see as normal so everybody’s behavior — including your own — gets magnified and the little things become the big things," he added.

Per South Africa's The Times, a person was removed from the Marion Island base after "allegedly running amok with an axe" six years ago.

DFFE's Mbelengwa, a contact for the SANAE IV base and a spokesperson for Dion George didn't immediately respond when contacted by PEOPLE for additional information regarding the investigation into the emails.

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You can totally commit murder at these Antarctic research bases:


There's no legal jurisdiction there, not even America's Fuck You All global one. Rodney Marks here was eventually determined to have ingested a huge quantity of methanol - way more than could be considered accidental - and none of the senior staff have played ball with investigators.

Apparently everyone at these research stations are drunk most of the time, or high as balls on weed or smack. The "no legal jurisdiction" thing attracts drug abusers, not entirely unsurprisingly.
 
There was a schizo homeless dude who regularly dumpster dived behind where I worked and one day he told me he worked in Antarctica. Considering most of his stories were outlandish grandiose schizo shit, I was ready for some tall tales. Instead it was basically about when he had his break with reality. He said he was in grad school and he was doing a stint as some sort of research librarian/archivist for a weather outpost when he started getting messages out of the boreholes they were drilling in the ice from ancient civilizations, so they sent him back home. Probably would have cracked anyways, but the isolation probably didn't help.
 
There was a schizo homeless dude who regularly dumpster dived behind where I worked and one day he told me he worked in Antarctica. Considering most of his stories were outlandish grandiose schizo shit, I was ready for some tall tales. Instead it was basically about when he had his break with reality. He said he was in grad school and he was doing a stint as some sort of research librarian/archivist for a weather outpost when he started getting messages out of the boreholes they were drilling in the ice from ancient civilizations, so they sent him back home. Probably would have cracked anyways, but the isolation probably didn't help.
We wuz supernatural conduits to ancient extinct civilizations under the ice of Antarctica n sheeit.
 
The number of blacks who could survive months of isolation with a small, unchanging group of people in a frozen hellscape with their sanity is likely very low. This is like the exact opposite of what blacks like.
 
There was a schizo homeless dude who regularly dumpster dived behind where I worked and one day he told me he worked in Antarctica. Considering most of his stories were outlandish grandiose schizo shit, I was ready for some tall tales. Instead it was basically about when he had his break with reality. He said he was in grad school and he was doing a stint as some sort of research librarian/archivist for a weather outpost when he started getting messages out of the boreholes they were drilling in the ice from ancient civilizations, so they sent him back home. Probably would have cracked anyways, but the isolation probably didn't help.
A lot of schizos had really interesting lives before they went nuts. I lived near a major psych hospital and they were all over the place begging for money. You'd see them slowly deteriorate, then disappear for two months, then come out sharp as a whistle and functional. Then the cycle would repeat. It's kind of a shame that some of them never find the right meds or choose to keep to the regimen if they do work. Most of the ones I met were really kind and damn intelligent.
 
A lot of schizos had really interesting lives before they went nuts. I lived near a major psych hospital and they were all over the place begging for money. You'd see them slowly deteriorate, then disappear for two months, then come out sharp as a whistle and functional. Then the cycle would repeat. It's kind of a shame that some of them never find the right meds or choose to keep to the regimen if they do work. Most of the ones I met were really kind and damn intelligent.
The problem is for as much as science has advanced for some things, the options available for long term medication for them still all basically suck in one major way or another. And that's even after you have found one that works and doesn't just make them worse in some new and horrifying way. Almost every single first line treatment causes weight gain, talking 30 kilos here not a pound or two that could be walked off, because they also fuck with the basic metabolic functions of the body. They cause diabetes and pancreatitis, some of them cause heart arrhythmias, most cause some degree of sedation and blunted reaction/reasoning, a couple are known for sometimes causing kidney failure or life-threatening blood cell changes...
 
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