Record Consolidation Directive
Date: August 3, 2018
Status: Public Summary Cleared
Archive Source: Greenland Project Internal Review
Summary
Following the formal recognition of the Greenland Containment Structure in early 2017, the primary objective of the program shifted from discovery to record reconciliation.
The structure itself remained untouched.
The priority was understanding how long it had already been known.
Archive Integration
Between late 2017 and mid-2018, classified and semi-classified records from multiple agencies were cross-referenced for the first time under a unified index.
These included:
Naval Arctic patrol archives
Air Force satellite anomaly reports
Geological survey irregularity logs
NATO sensor calibration discrepancies
Civilian academic field notes recovered from closed expeditions
None of these sources identified the structure directly.
All of them described the same geographic coordinates.
Pattern Recognition
When layered chronologically, the records revealed a repeating cycle:
Detection
Dismissal
Reclassification
Loss of reference
The structure had never been erased.
It had simply been renamed repeatedly.
Strategic Conclusion
By August 2018, project leadership formally concluded:
The Greenland structure has been independently rediscovered at least twelve times since 1900.
Each rediscovery was treated as a new anomaly.
None were linked.
Administrative Directive
A consolidation order was issued to:
Prevent future renaming of the site
Standardize all references under a single designation
Classify the structure as a standing strategic anomaly
Prohibit physical interference pending historical analysis
The structure was officially listed as:
Greenland Containment Structure — Primary Node
Closing Note
The Admiral’s closing comment on the directive reads:
“We are not studying a mystery.
We are studying our own inability to remember.”