Linda Moulton Howe Breaks Silence on Antarctica — “People Need to Know”
INVESTIGATIVE LEGEND WARNS HUMANITY “PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW”
In a rare, emotionally charged interview that has sent ripples across the alternative research community, legendary investigative journalist Linda Moulton Howe has finally broken her long silence on one of the most guarded places on Earth: Antarctica.
For decades, the Emmy-winning reporter known for her fearless deep dives into UFOs, cattle mutilations, and government secrets has received credible insider information about the frozen continent that she chose not to release publicly — until now.
“People need to know,” she stated with quiet intensity, her voice carrying the weight of years of suppressed revelations.
What she is revealing challenges everything we believe about human history, secret programs, and what may be awakening beneath miles of Antarctic ice.
Linda Moulton Howe has spent over 40 years documenting the unexplained.

From her groundbreaking work on alien abduction cases to her exhaustive investigations into mysterious animal mutilations with surgical precision, she has built a reputation for pursuing truth no matter the personal or professional cost.
Multiple times over the past two decades, sources with high-level military and scientific backgrounds approached her with extraordinary claims about Antarctica: massive underground facilities, non-human craft, ancient structures older than any known civilization, and deliberate suppression of information by multiple world governments.
For years she held back, verifying, cross-checking, and waiting for the right moment.
That moment, she says, has arrived.
“Antarctica is not what we’ve been told,” Howe declared.
“There are things down there that belong to a much older chapter of Earth’s story — and some that may not be from Earth at all.”
Her new revelations center on firsthand accounts from scientists, pilots, and support personnel who worked on the continent under extreme secrecy.
Multiple sources describe enormous subglacial caverns and artificial structures detected by ground-penetrating radar and seismic imaging.
Some describe smooth, machined surfaces and geometric patterns that defy natural geological explanation.
Others speak of sudden “no-fly” zones enforced by rapid military response, unexplained magnetic anomalies that disable instruments, and luminous objects emerging from beneath the ice shelves.
One particularly chilling account involves a 2016 discovery during a routine ice-core drilling operation.
A team allegedly penetrated a large void containing what appeared to be metallic structures and preserved organic material far older than the ice above it.
According to Howe’s sources, the find triggered an immediate lockdown.
International teams were quietly removed from the area, and the site was reclassified under the Antarctic Treaty’s scientific provisions while black-budget operations took over.
Similar stories describe geothermal pockets maintaining habitable temperatures deep underground, complete with liquid water lakes and possible signs of long-term habitation.
The implications Moulton Howe presents are staggering.
During the last Ice Age, large portions of Antarctica were likely ice-free and temperate.
Advanced mapping projects like Bedmap3 have recently revealed complex subglacial topography including straight channels, plateau-like formations, and mountain ranges that some interpret as evidence of prior intelligent modification.
Combined with ancient maps such as the Piri Reis map — which shows an ice-free Antarctic coastline with startling accuracy — the picture emerging is one of a forgotten advanced civilization that thrived before a cataclysmic pole shift or rapid climate event buried their works under miles of ice.
Howe connects these findings to broader patterns she has documented for decades.
Whistleblowers describe seeing craft of unknown origin entering and exiting through massive ice crevasses.
Some accounts mention tall humanoid figures associated with certain restricted zones.
Others speak of recovered technology far beyond current human capability being studied in hidden facilities.
“The same patterns we see in UFO encounters worldwide appear amplified in Antarctica,” she notes.
“The continent seems to function as both a refuge and a repository — a place where the past and possibly other intelligences intersect with our present.”
The investigative journalist emphasizes that multiple nations are involved.
The Antarctic Treaty of 1959, signed by 12 countries and now with over 50 signatories, officially designates the continent for peaceful scientific research.
Yet Moulton Howe’s sources claim the treaty also serves as a convenient veil for coordinated secrecy.
American, Russian, Chinese, and other operations allegedly maintain separate but occasionally overlapping underground bases.
Some are said to extend deep into the bedrock, powered by geothermal energy and protected by advanced security systems.
The “people need to know” urgency in her voice stems from what she sees as accelerating activity — increased melting due to climate change is exposing more anomalies, forcing governments to manage disclosure carefully while preparing for potential revelations.
One of the most disturbing threads in her new disclosures involves biological findings.
Sources describe the discovery of preserved specimens in ice cores and subglacial lakes — some humanoid in form but with distinct physiological differences.
Others mention microbial life with genetic markers that challenge conventional evolutionary timelines.
If true, these finds would prove that complex life — and possibly intelligent life — existed in Antarctica far earlier than mainstream science accepts.
The rapid melting currently underway could release more such evidence, creating both scientific opportunity and existential questions about humanity’s place in the cosmic story.
Moulton Howe’s decision to speak now comes after careful consideration.
She has watched as other researchers and whistleblowers faced ridicule or worse for similar claims.
Recent official UAP disclosures by the United States and other nations have created a slightly more open environment, though Antarctica remains heavily restricted.
“The ice is melting faster than expected,” she warns.
“What has been hidden for thousands of years may soon become visible whether governments want it or not.”
Her message carries both wonder and caution: we stand on the threshold of discoveries that could redefine human identity, yet the forces guarding these secrets remain powerful.
The emotional weight of her words lands heavily.
Linda Moulton Howe has spent a lifetime pursuing uncomfortable truths, often at great personal sacrifice.
Her voice, measured yet urgent, conveys the solemn responsibility she feels to share what she knows before it’s too late.
“People need to know,” she repeats, “because this isn’t just about Antarctica.
It’s about who we are, where we came from, and what may be coming next.”
As climate researchers document unprecedented ice loss and new radar surveys reveal ever more puzzling sub-surface features, Moulton Howe’s revelations feel increasingly timely.
The frozen continent at the bottom of the world, long dismissed as a barren scientific outpost, may actually hold the keys to our deepest past and most profound future questions.
Whether the structures are natural, artificial, or something far stranger, the truth buried beneath the ice can no longer remain completely silent.
Linda Moulton Howe has broken her silence.
The question now is whether the world is ready to listen — and what will happen when the ice finally gives up all its secrets.