Mpsol Weather Report Antarctica Event

MPSoL Weather Report – Archive Entry 011

Atmospheric Summary

Unseasonal clarity observed over southern longitudinal sectors. High-altitude stratospheric thinning noted by geomantic relay stations. No accompanying auroral activity detected. Magnetic deviation reports unavailable (records lost in Polar Tilt Reset).

Cloud formations over southern quadrants described as static and brilliant, with no rotational core—suggesting non-meteorological luminosity. Surface temperature increase measured, but instrument integrity is disputed.

Precipitation

Initial vapor plume followed by hydromass condensation across all surveyed sectors.
Rain was not recorded.
Descent was described as “warm snow, then hail, then silence.”
Melt runoff presumed to have caused temporary inland seas.
Evaporation followed by phase-shift cooling.

Wind Report

Vector shear exceeded containment thresholds.
Several relay towers folded without impact stress—presumed airframe collapse due to vacuum inflection.
Wind recorded as both directional and atmospheric, with episodes of stillness described as “auditory compression.”
Many noted that sound arrived before pressure dropped.

Visibility

None.
Then too much.
Then none again.

Witness reports describe the light as “mistaken for dawn, but unpeeling into something else.”
Optical phenomena rendered directional awareness irrelevant.
All shadows reported to bend inward.

Closing Note (Filed, Redacted)

We are no longer certain the weather came from above.
There is evidence it may have arrived laterally, or from beneath.
No further comment.

Filed under:
Post-Apex Memory Recovery Unit
Celestial Cartography & Atmospheric Irregularities Division
MPSoL Weather Anomaly Catalogue – Entry 011 – The Day the Pattern Was Sealed