Friday, 17 October 2008

Beware of the Shaggoth

Cthulhu fhtagn!
An international expedition is exploring the Gamburtsev Range aka the Mountains of Madness.

Iä! Cthulhu fhtagn! What could possibly go wrong?

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Still looking for that secret Nazi base are they?

I'd love to see someone mount an undersea expedition in the Antarctic to look for Admiral Byrd's Snow Cruiser

Sergej said...

Heh. There's a small pond in SE Michigan where the local diving schools like to do open-water certification dives. Big attraction: the snow mobile, which came quite close to making it across the ice one winter. As in, let's navigate through the no-visibility (newbie divers stir up a lot of silt!), to The Snow Mobile.

Blocky 1970s/80s design. No skeleton in the saddle; I hope the pilot made it to shore.

Anonymous said...

The Nazis are still supposed to be flying their flying saucers in the Antarctic.
About two years ago I got really interested in Victor Schauberger's flying saucer drawings that he had supposedly made during WW2, but they just didn't make any sense.
Where did the electromagnetic force interact with gravity ?
After scratching my head for a few weeks, I concluded that my knowledge wasn't up to the job.

And I couldn't find Neuschwabenland on the maps !

jayessell said...

Ivan....


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KEueJnsu80

Anonymous said...

Thanks. It's good that they turned it into a film viewable by a wide audience.
Now excuse me while I bother myself with the thought of trying to repel a space Nazi invasion for another few hours. It shouldn't last longer before they destroy our infrastructure.

Anonymous said...

An audio adaptation of 'At the Mountains of Madness' is available from the Atlanta Radio Theatre Co. at:

http://www.artc.org/products/AttheMountainsofMadness.html