Meterological Station 21-00014 was established on the island of South Georgia in early 1927 by an American-Norwegian whaling consortium headed by noted magnate Parker R. Kean. For the first few years of its life, Station 21-00014 operated during the summer months with a permanent crew of three. Following the banking crash of late 1929 and Kean's widely publicized suicide by autodefenestration, the station was abandoned. The fate of its last recorded crew remains uncertain, with no further replenishment craft recorded after that date, although unverified reports suggest that at least one member arrived in Nansen Harbor during the summer of 1930.
In early 1959, a private expedition sent to the site of the station by the Eurospatiale Group reported that "[the site] had undergone utter obliteration by snowfall, rockslide, and structural oxidation", though those who managed to locate what remained of the broadcasting antenna noted the strikng absence of that electrical equipment which had not been recovered. The station has not since been visited, and further satellite analysis has failed to uncover any traces of human activity at or near its location.
On or before January 1, 1970, the site began broadcasting a faint series of repeating transmissions, which have not ceased since that date. These transmissions were first picked up by amateur radio operators, but have since their formal discovery in late 1989 been continuously monitored and published by Eurospatiale. These transmissions have changed over time. This website, in its current form, is the result of constant decryption of these transmissions into Morse code; this Morse code is then parsed into data that constitutes every word and image here published except for this note. The transmitting station's current proprietor is unknown.
Your number is
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