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bananas

(27,509 posts)
Fri Feb 10, 2012, 10:18 PM Feb 2012

Satellite shot shows Russia's 'moon shot' ice station

http://photoblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/10/10374852-satellite-shot-shows-russias-moon-shot-ice-station

Satellite shot shows Russia's 'moon shot' ice station

By Alan Boyle



The Russians say that drilling down to a 20 million-
year-old lake in Antarctica, more than two miles
beneath the surface, is the equivalent of putting an
astronaut on the moon. If that's the case, this
satellite photo from DigitalGlobe is the equivalent
of watching Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin at
work.

<snip>

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Satellite shot shows Russia's 'moon shot' ice station (Original Post) bananas Feb 2012 OP
Cool photo - thanks for posting it. n/t xocet Feb 2012 #1
great shot ! padruig Feb 2012 #2
Your summary is nicely done. The Wielding Truth Feb 2012 #3
Wow, nice summary! slutticus Feb 2012 #5
Not to be a downer secondvariety Feb 2012 #4

padruig

(133 posts)
2. great shot !
Sat Feb 11, 2012, 01:36 PM
Feb 2012

Antarctica started to ice over about 30 million years ago. Technically speaking, the entire continent is a desert with an average of two inches of rain per year. It is the coldest, windy-est and most difficult of places to work on the planet.

The difficulty in drilling to these depths on the ice is first the ice is not static, its moving. Secondly that the drill hole will collapse over time so you may have to re-drill sections of the bore hole.

Drilling down to Lake Vostok has always carried some controversy. Everyone agrees that the lake itself has not seen the outer world for millions of years so what life may exist there has taken an evolutionary path that will be unique and until now unseen. You want to sample that life but without potential contamination from the surface.

The core hole was filled with diesel fuel and kerosene to keep the ice from closing during the winter season but both of these however contain bacteria that will contaminate any sample brought up from the lake itself and potentially contaminate the lake itself.

The Russian team held off the last 300' of drilling until some of these concerns could be mitigated. Then someone calculated the internal pressure of the lake itself with two miles of ice sitting atop it!

They decided to take a decidedly 'surgical' approach to penetrating the lake. They switched from their diesel/kerosene solution to freon. That would limit any contamination they may introduce. Then then switched from the large diameter drill to a thermally heated drill probe just a few inches across.

Their plan was to push through into the lake, let the internal pressure equalize pushing up lake water into the drill hole, withdraw the drill probe and let the lake water freeze in the drill hole like a plug.

Using this approach they hopefully pushed any potential contaminates up the drill hole.

They will take samples from the frozen material in the drill hole next season and we'll see what came up in the wash.

secondvariety

(1,245 posts)
4. Not to be a downer
Sun Feb 12, 2012, 11:32 AM
Feb 2012

But didn't they use like 60 tons of "lubricant" in the drilling process? It would be a shame (but not totally surprising) if a 20 million year old lake became polluted with petroleum products on the first contact with humans.

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