Drill Close to Reaching 14-Million-Year-Old Antarctic Lake
source: http://io9.com/5728459/russians-will-be-first-to-explore-untouched-antarctic-lake-vostok-in-...
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- pjacobs51
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It's possible that special life forms have adapted to live in this extreme environment, and scientists hope to learn more once they can analyze water samples.
No, sorry, it's not on Europa - it's in Antarctica. But the environment of Lake Vostok, which Russian scientists are about to drill open, is very similar to that Jovian moon and to Enceladus, a frozen satellite of Saturn. Astrobiologists are among those eager to uncover Lake Vostok's Miocene-era secrets.
The Antarctic Treaty Secretariat, a body set up to protect the frozen continent, approved a Russian team's process to extract water from the lake while preventing contamination, according to New Scientist. By the end of this month, a team from Russia's Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute (AARI) in St Petersburg expects to hit water.
The lake's water pressure will push the drilling fluid up into the borehole, where it will freeze. Next year, researchers will return to extract that ancient water and analyze its contents.
Efforts to drill into Lake Vostok have been stalled since 1998, when the treaty organization stopped the Russian team's work until further environmental studies could prove the lake would not be polluted. Later studies showed this would be tricky - in 2003, NASA astrobiologists said the lake's high nitrogen and oxygen levels would cause the water to fizz like a shaken soda can, opening the lake to possible contamination and even posing a threat to the scientists.
Lake Vostok has oxygen levels 50 times that of other freshwater lakes, so scientists believe life would have had to evolve protective enzymes or other adaptations to survive. If so, these extremophiles could have implications for life on Enceladus or Europa.
No one is sure where the ice-water boundary lies, so scientists are not sure when they'll break through.
http://io9.com/5728459/russians-will-be-first-to-explore-untouched-antarctic-lak...
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ras_menelik
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The Thing!!!!
- 2 years ago
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ras_menelik
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royulery
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the safest way to drill was too expensive. using an instrument package attached to a small nuclear reactor and miles of wire, it would melt gradually through the ice, washing itself in radiation and hot water while the hole froze above it. the project wasn't worth the money.
- 2 years ago
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royulery
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NickerBocker09
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It should be interesting to study whats down there, but I hope they dont contaminate or do anything harmful. I guess we can trust these scientists (hopefully).
- 2 years ago
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NickerBocker09
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ghostofamerica
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chthulu?
- 2 years ago
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ghostofamerica
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Nephwrack
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i'm gonna laugh when a shoggoth comes out of the hole and owns everyone there.
- 2 years ago
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Nephwrack
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adamvelvetu
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Nephwrack:
its probably an entrance to the center of the world.
- 2 years ago
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adamvelvetu
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Jeremy_Benson
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The one time I'm excited to hear about drilling. I wonder if the lake is so rich in oxygen that you could breath it? Then again, apparently it's full of nitrogen, too.
- 2 years ago
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Jeremy_Benson
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idealist
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Jeremy_Benson:
what a rush! :P
- 2 years ago
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idealist
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royulery
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Jeremy_Benson:
we are already breathing 80% nitrogen.
- 2 years ago
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royulery
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royulery
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Jeremy_Benson:
i'm guessing the water would only be breathable at that great depth as it would boil violently at sea level.
- 2 years ago
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royulery
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JanforGore
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http://water-is-life.blogspot.com/2006/08/what-lies-beneath-lake-vostok-part-one...
http://water-is-life.blogspot.com/search?q=lake+vostok
So we will now be the invasive species.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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pjacobs51
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JanforGore:
When were we not?
- 2 years ago
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pjacobs51
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JanforGore
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pjacobs51:
True, and sad. But it is amazing to know there is life so far down in such a cold dark place. At least until it is opened up. We may well then also be responsible for killing something that thrived for millions of years all for our own curiosity. Here's to hoping we also don't set off a glacial earthquake.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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Jeremy_Benson
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JanforGore:
Good article. ^'d
- 2 years ago
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Jeremy_Benson
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EmperorThan
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I think when they start finding animals with DNA from a separate genesis of life they'll know they've broken through!
- 2 years ago
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EmperorThan
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echelgreen
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EmperorThan:
Yep, there is bound to be a shadow biosphere.
- 2 years ago
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echelgreen
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remanns
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Too cool. Heh. But, no,....really !
- 2 years ago
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remanns
