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Russian scientists drill into Antarctic lake buried under the ice for 20 million years
Tue 7 Feb 2012 - 15:51
Russian scientists have finally drilled down through four kilometres of Antarctic ice to a lake that has been
sealed for the last 20 million years.
Veteran Antarctic researcher Professor John Priscu says that he expects to see 'unique organisms' in the lake.
But it was revealed
this may not be the only surprise from sub-glacial Lake Vostok, a body of water as
large as Lake Ontario.
As scientists began the search for new life, a state-run
news agency in Russia claimed that an extraordinary cache of
Hitler's archives may be buried in a secret Nazi ice bunker near the spot where
yesterday's breakthrough was made.
‘It is thought that towards the end of the Second World War,
the Nazis moved to the South Pole and started constructing a base at Lake
Vostok,’ claimed RIA Novosti, the Russian state news agency.
It cited Admiral Karl Dontiz in 1943 saying ‘Germany's
submarine fleet is proud that it created an unassailable fortress for the
Fuehrer on the other end of the world’, in Antarctica.
According to German naval archives, months after the Nazis
surrendered to the Allies in April 1945, a U-530 submarine arrived at the South
Pole from the Port of Kiel.
The crew are rumoured to have constructed a still
undiscovered ice cave ‘and supposedly stored several boxes of relics from the
Third Reich, including Hitler's secret files’.
A later claim was that a U-977 submarine delivered remains
of Hitler and Eva Braun to Antarctica in the hope they could be cloned from their DNA.
The submariners then went to Argentina to surrender, it was claimed.
Microbiologists say that the lake could offer a glimpse of unique life forms. The project has been closely watched by both NASA and the
Russian Space Agency.
One hope is that it will give a glimpse of conditions on
Jupiter's moon Europa where water is also believed to exist under a thick ice
cover.
‘The
discovery of microorganisms in Lake Vostok may mean that, perhaps, the first
meeting with extraterrestrial life could happen on Europa,’ said Dr Vladimir
Kotlyakov, Director of the Geography Institute at the Russian Academy of
Sciences.
Specialists at the Russian Arctic and Antarctic Research
Institute will now test a sample of water that has been sucked from the lake,
and frozen.
Last year, the expedition stopped 10 to
50 metres short of the lake after the weather closed in and the
scientists were forced to abandon the expedition.
Academics say they have found ‘the only giant
super-clean water system on the planet’. They forecast the extraordinary 5,400
cubic kilometres of pristine water will be ‘twice cleaner than double-distilled
water’, and any life will have developed in total isolation.
‘We're not talking a new Loch Ness Monster - though we
actually cannot really predict what to expect,' an expedition source told Ria Novosti. ‘The lake
water is a moving body, and despite being almost 4 km under the ice, there is
an oxygen supply, and microorganisms have already been found in the ice drilled
from close to the roof of Lake Vostok.’
Professor
John Priscu told usnews.com in an email that the crews had been working
‘round the clock’ to finish the project before the Antarctic summer
ended, which meant no planes could fly from the remote Vostok Station,
where temperatures are currently around minus 66C.
'If
they were successful, their efforts will transform the way we do
science in Antarctica and provide us with an entirely new view of what
exists under the vast Antarctic ice sheet,' he said.
Geothermal heat under the ice keeps the
lake liquid, and its conditions are often described as 'alien' because
they are thought to be akin to the subterranean lakes on Jupiter's moon
Europa.
'I think we'll find unique
organisms,' Professor Priscu, a microbiologist at the University of
Montana, and a veteran Antarctic researcher who is on the trip told
Scientific American.
On January 13, Mr Priscu
said the team was progressing well, drilling 5.7ft a day. He said they
had switched from an ice drill to a thermal drill to melt through the
last 16 to 32ft of ice.
'This
was the plan, but when you're in the field, things can change,' Priscu,
who had been communicating with the group from his office in St.
Petersburg, said.
'This has
never been done before,' Priscu told OurAmazingPlanet. 'It's a
one-of-a-kind drill, a one-of-a-kind borehole, and a one-of-a-kind lake,
so I'm sure they're making decisions on the fly all the time.'
The
team had a deadline of Tuesday, before already ice-cold temperatures in
the desolate spot drop another 40 degrees centigrade.
Valery Lukin, chief of the Russian Antactic Expedition, said last month: 'We do not know what is waiting for us down there.'
Source
sealed for the last 20 million years.
Veteran Antarctic researcher Professor John Priscu says that he expects to see 'unique organisms' in the lake.
But it was revealed
this may not be the only surprise from sub-glacial Lake Vostok, a body of water as
large as Lake Ontario.
As scientists began the search for new life, a state-run
news agency in Russia claimed that an extraordinary cache of
Hitler's archives may be buried in a secret Nazi ice bunker near the spot where
yesterday's breakthrough was made.
‘It is thought that towards the end of the Second World War,
the Nazis moved to the South Pole and started constructing a base at Lake
Vostok,’ claimed RIA Novosti, the Russian state news agency.
It cited Admiral Karl Dontiz in 1943 saying ‘Germany's
submarine fleet is proud that it created an unassailable fortress for the
Fuehrer on the other end of the world’, in Antarctica.
According to German naval archives, months after the Nazis
surrendered to the Allies in April 1945, a U-530 submarine arrived at the South
Pole from the Port of Kiel.
The crew are rumoured to have constructed a still
undiscovered ice cave ‘and supposedly stored several boxes of relics from the
Third Reich, including Hitler's secret files’.
A later claim was that a U-977 submarine delivered remains
of Hitler and Eva Braun to Antarctica in the hope they could be cloned from their DNA.
The submariners then went to Argentina to surrender, it was claimed.
Microbiologists say that the lake could offer a glimpse of unique life forms. The project has been closely watched by both NASA and the
Russian Space Agency.
One hope is that it will give a glimpse of conditions on
Jupiter's moon Europa where water is also believed to exist under a thick ice
cover.
‘The
discovery of microorganisms in Lake Vostok may mean that, perhaps, the first
meeting with extraterrestrial life could happen on Europa,’ said Dr Vladimir
Kotlyakov, Director of the Geography Institute at the Russian Academy of
Sciences.
Specialists at the Russian Arctic and Antarctic Research
Institute will now test a sample of water that has been sucked from the lake,
and frozen.
Last year, the expedition stopped 10 to
50 metres short of the lake after the weather closed in and the
scientists were forced to abandon the expedition.
Academics say they have found ‘the only giant
super-clean water system on the planet’. They forecast the extraordinary 5,400
cubic kilometres of pristine water will be ‘twice cleaner than double-distilled
water’, and any life will have developed in total isolation.
‘We're not talking a new Loch Ness Monster - though we
actually cannot really predict what to expect,' an expedition source told Ria Novosti. ‘The lake
water is a moving body, and despite being almost 4 km under the ice, there is
an oxygen supply, and microorganisms have already been found in the ice drilled
from close to the roof of Lake Vostok.’
Professor
John Priscu told usnews.com in an email that the crews had been working
‘round the clock’ to finish the project before the Antarctic summer
ended, which meant no planes could fly from the remote Vostok Station,
where temperatures are currently around minus 66C.
'If
they were successful, their efforts will transform the way we do
science in Antarctica and provide us with an entirely new view of what
exists under the vast Antarctic ice sheet,' he said.
Geothermal heat under the ice keeps the
lake liquid, and its conditions are often described as 'alien' because
they are thought to be akin to the subterranean lakes on Jupiter's moon
Europa.
'I think we'll find unique
organisms,' Professor Priscu, a microbiologist at the University of
Montana, and a veteran Antarctic researcher who is on the trip told
Scientific American.
On January 13, Mr Priscu
said the team was progressing well, drilling 5.7ft a day. He said they
had switched from an ice drill to a thermal drill to melt through the
last 16 to 32ft of ice.
'This
was the plan, but when you're in the field, things can change,' Priscu,
who had been communicating with the group from his office in St.
Petersburg, said.
'This has
never been done before,' Priscu told OurAmazingPlanet. 'It's a
one-of-a-kind drill, a one-of-a-kind borehole, and a one-of-a-kind lake,
so I'm sure they're making decisions on the fly all the time.'
The
team had a deadline of Tuesday, before already ice-cold temperatures in
the desolate spot drop another 40 degrees centigrade.
Valery Lukin, chief of the Russian Antactic Expedition, said last month: 'We do not know what is waiting for us down there.'
Source
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