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Joined: 05 Nov 2003
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Location: Auckland, New Zealand
Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2007 11:12 am Post Subject: McMurdo Station has long history of Ghostly Activity
Apparently, Antarctica's McMurdo Station has quite a history of apparent ghostly activity. Many people who have worked there attribute their strange experiences to the ghosts of those who died in the 1979 Erebus crash, whose bodies were stored at McMurdo before being flown back to New Zealand. Even Sir Edmund Hillary has his own story of seeing an apparition of Ernest Shackleton in one of the huts:
"I remember when I first went to Shackleton's hut - and I'm not a person who really sees things very much - but I went inside the door and when I opened the door - it's a rather sort of bare hut inside - but I distinctly saw Shackleton walking towards me and welcoming me and then it all sort of flashed away and he was gone," he said. "It's the only time I can ever remember something occurring like that so I have a very warm feeling indeed for Shackleton and for his hut and I really believe that those huts...Shackleton and Scott's...must be preserved. "Shackleton has always been my hero. I still admire enormously his courage and skill in moments of danger." Edmund Hillary
Stuff wrote:
A supernatural experience in Antarctica on Friday the 13th has left a winter worker convinced of the existence of ghosts on the frozen continent.
American Allie Barden was sent to work in a stores building at McMurdo Station, the United States base near New Zealand's Scott Base, and knew it was empty because it was padlocked from outside when she arrived.
"As soon as I entered, something was weird," she said.
"I took a couple of steps in (and) the hair on the top of my head stood on end – footsteps upstairs; undeniably footsteps. A slow cadence of footsteps.
"I froze. It went from the back of the building to the front."
Ross Island is rife with ghostly sightings, often attributed to the 257 victims of the Air New Zealand plane crash on Mount Erebus in 1979, whose bodies were stored at McMurdo before being returned to New Zealand.
Sir Edmund Hillary claimed to have been greeted by Sir Ernest Shackleton's ghost when he visited the polar explorer's hut nearby a few years ago.
Scott Base winter manager Glenn Powell said there had been no spectral sightings at the New Zealand base, but Barden, who writes a blog under the name Sandwichgirl, said there were frequent reports of ghosts 3km away at McMurdo Station.
"Ghosts haunt McMurdo. I've been hearing about it for ages," Barden said. "Ghosts from the Erebus plane crash haunt the big gym."
Barden worked in Building 174, where toxic and flammable goods are stored and which she considered to be "a boring place to haunt", but she said others claimed to have felt similar spectral visits.
"It's always when we're alone and you can't turn to another person and say, 'Did you hear that?' Myself and my two co-workers have probably experienced the same thing, hearing footsteps walking around upstairs," she said.
"They don't last very long. The first time I went in there ... I tooled around, marked some things that needed to go elsewhere, and looked at things I wanted to open. Then I got a call on the radio to do a quick thing at another place.
"I went, did that, and came back to 174. The door had been padlocked, so I knew no-one was inside. As soon as I went inside I knew something was different, but I wasn't thinking `ghost' until I heard the footsteps."
When she heard the footsteps, she called a co-worker, who claimed to have had a similar encounter in the storehouse a few weeks before.
Barden said she remained in the storeroom for 10 to 15 minutes until called away to another job. When she returned, the ghostly presence was gone.