A tiny, ice-covered volcano stranded in the absolute middle of nowhere, Bouvet Island is the most remote island on Earth. Yet this useless rock has hosted phantom islands, an abandoned lifeboat with no crew, and an unexplained possible nuclear flash.
This episode is a deep dive into a geographic paradox, drawing on naval archives, Cold War records, and modern science. We explore how an island so hostile it swallows steel research stations became a magnet for human ambition, and why its extreme isolation makes it the perfect place to hide secrets.
Why a volcano with 25-degree-Celsius heat just below the surface stays 93 percent glacier, a heated floor under an unbreakable sheet of ice
How explorer Bouvet lost the island on the map for decades, and how it spawned the phantom 'Thompson Island' that stayed on charts until 1943
The 1964 mystery of an abandoned lifeboat, later traced to stranded Soviet sailors evacuated by helicopter in 1958
The 1979 Vela incident, a satellite-detected 'double flash' near the island, and the competing glitch versus secret nuclear test theories
How earthquakes and Roaring Forties storms hurled a steel container station into the sea, and why its krill-rich waters now drive ecological debate
Podden och tillhörande omslagsbild på den här sidan tillhör
pplpod. Innehållet i podden är skapat av pplpod och inte av,
eller tillsammans med, Poddtoppen.