For 14 million years, Antarctica鈥檚 vast Lake Vostok has remained tantalisingly sealed off from the rest of the world, hidden under 4 kilometres of ice. What unique forms of life might have evolved in the hidden depths?
After years of speculation we are about to find out, as a Russian drill nears the lake. The , the body set up to preserve the continent, has approved the to ensure the reservoir is not polluted. Researchers from Russia鈥檚 (AARI) in St Petersburg expect to reach the water in late January.
The AARI鈥檚 Valery Lukin says they have devised a clever method for sampling the lake without contaminating it. 鈥淥nce the lake is reached, the water pressure will push the working body and the drilling fluid upwards in the borehole, and then freeze again,鈥 Lukin says. The following season, the team will go back to bore in that frozen water, take the sample out and analyse its contents.
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鈥淭he Russians really did a good job in giving answers to all the fears raised that their actions would contaminate this unexplored environment,鈥 says Manfred Reinke, head of the ATS.
Unknown life?
Covering an area of 16 square kilometres, and reaching down 1050 metres, Lake Vostok is isolated from the other 150 subglacial lakes found in Antarctica. Anything living in the lake is either very old, or 鈥 potentially 鈥 an unknown form of life.
The Russian science team based at Vostok station have been ready to drill into ice above the lake since 1998. But the ATS wouldn鈥檛 give the go-ahead until it was satisfied that a thorough environmental assessment had been conducted to avoid any pollution of the pristine reservoir.
鈥淭he bottom of the new borehole lies at 3650 metres, more or less 100 metres above the lake,鈥 says Lukin. 鈥淏eginning late December, we will first use a mechanical drill and the usual kerosene-freon to reach 3725 metres. Then, a newly developed thermal drill head, using a clean silicon-oil fluid and equipped with a camera, will go through the last 20 to 30 metres of ice.鈥
of the French Polar Institute Paul Emile Victor in Brest, France, doubts the Russians will penetrate the lake during this Antarctic summer. 鈥淚n respect to the Antarctic Treaty, they should wait 60 days after having submitted their CEE, which would bring them almost to the end of the Antarctic season.鈥
Lukin admits time is short but says that since the exact location of the ice-water boundary is not known, 鈥渢he breakthrough could well happen in a few weeks.鈥
