British engineering team heads to Antarctica to explore hidden lake17/10/2011 13:01:24At the frontier of exploration October 2011: A British engineering team is heading off to Antarctica for the first stage of an ambitious scientific mission to collect water and sediment samples from a lake buried beneath 3km of solid ice.
This extraordinary research project, at the frontier of exploration, will yield new knowledge about the evolution of life on Earth and other planets, and will provide vital clues about the Earth's past climate. One of the most remote and hostile environments on Earth Their task is to prepare the way for the ‘deep-field' research mission that will take place one year later. In October next year, a team of ten scientists and engineers will use state-of-the-art hot-water drilling technology to make a 3km bore hole through the ice. They will then lower a titanium probe to measure and sample the water followed by a corer to extract sediment from the lake. Lake Ellsworth is likely to be the first of Antarctica's 387 known subglacial lakes to be measured and sampled directly through the design and manufacture of space-industry standard ‘clean technology'. 'Only now do we have the expertise to explore this hidden world' The Lake Ellsworth Programme principal investigator, Professor Martin Siegert from the University of Edinburgh, says: ‘For almost 15 years we've been planning to explore this hidden world. It's only now that we have the expertise and technology to drill through Antarctica's thickest ice and collect samples without contaminating this untouched and pristine environment. ‘We are tremendously excited - this is a frontier science project with engineering and technology at the forefront. Scientists and engineers from two of the Natural Environment Research Council's (NERC) centres of excellence, working in partnership with scientists from eight UK universities, make up the consortium that will search for life in this extreme environment and discover the secrets locked in the sediments. ‘Every piece of equipment is a bespoke design and they have been built in partnership with several UK businesses.' 'This could define limits at which life can no longer exist' ‘If we find nothing this will be even more significant because it will define limits at which life can no longer exist on the planet.' Scientists at British Antarctic Survey and Durham University, working in partnership with Austrian business UWITEC, have designed and built a sediment corer, which can extract a core up to three metres long. The unique percussion-driven piston corer is strong enough to penetrate even the most compacted glacial sediments to extract a core sample.
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