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    Success! Russian Team Breaches Buried Antarctic Lake

    It's official. Russian scientists announced today that they have reached Antarctica's Lake Vostok, an ancient, liquid lake the size of Lake Ontario buried beneath more than 2 miles (3 kilometers) of ice for at least 14 million years.  

    The revelation comes after days of speculation on whether the years-long effort had finally achieved its goal.

    News of the scientific milestone was evidently on hold, as Russian headquarters waited on some measurements from Vostok Station, the tiny outpost in the middle of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet where the Russians have been drilling toward Lake Vostok since the late 1990s.

    In fact, just after 9 a.m. local time (12 a.m. ET), Sergei Lesenkov, a spokesman for Russia's Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, based in St. Petersburg, told OurAmazingPlanet that the team was still awaiting some final numbers from Antarctica.

    "We are waiting for information which will allow us to confirm this result," Lesenkov said. He said that it appeared lake water had shot dozens of meters up into the long borehole, but that an announcement would likely come on Thursday morning, local time.

    Yet it appears the Vostok team came through faster than expected, and Russia announced to the world that it had reached Lake Vostok just a few hours later.

    The team's ice-coring drill broke through the slushy layer of ice at the bottom of the massive ice sheet and reached fresh, liquid lake water on Feb. 5, at a depth of 12,366 feet (3,769 meters) according to the press release issued today by the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute

    Scientists suspect that the massive lake could house cold-loving organisms uniquely adapted to live in the darkness under the ice. The lake has been cut off from the outside world since the ice sheet covered it — as long as 34 million years ago, or, according to the most modest estimates, 14 million years ago. [Antarctica's Biggest Mysteries]

    Contamination concerns

    Some scientists have expressed concern over the drill method the Russians are using at Lake Vostok. Their ice-coring drill, which was originally designed to bore deep into the ice sheet and bring back long tubes of ice for climate research, uses what is essentially jet fuel to keep the long borehole from freezing over season after season, and there are fears that the fuel will contaminate the lake, or at least the lake water samples retained for research.

    The Russians have maintained that, because the Freon, kerosene and other hydrocarbons in the drill fluid are less dense than water, that they will be pushed up through the borehole and will never touch the lake. Today's press release states that this has indeed been the case, and that drill fluid was pushed up and away from the lake itself and into sealed containers.

    Drilling began at Vostok Station in the 1970s, before there was any inkling that one of the largest lakes on Earth lay beneath the site, and the drill the Vostok team is using wasn't built to retrieve lake water. It can only fetch ice, thus the team won't be able to actually get their hands on water samples and test them for life until next season — the water must be left to freeze in the borehole over the austral winter.

    Alive and well?

    Several scientists have said that even if the Russians don't find evidence of living organisms in the samples they bring back from Vostok, there's no reason to believe the lake is a dead zone.

    "A 'no' answer isn't a clear negative," said Robin Bell, a geophysicist and professor at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, who has studied Lake Vostok and other buried Antarctic lakes for more than a decade.

    Bell said that life likes to gather on the edges of environments — "We like to live on the beach," she said — so it's likely that anything living in the lake might set up house in the mud at the bottom, or at the edges of the ice.

    The Vostok project is sampling only surface layers of the lake, from one of its shallowest areas, because of the location of the station itself. When the Soviets built Vostok Station in the mid-20th century, they happened to choose a spot right over the southern tip of the lake.

    The lake's true scale wasn't officially established until the mid-1990s, and data now indicate the lake is roughly 155 miles (250 km) long, 50 miles (80 km) wide in places, and more than 1,600 feet (500 m) deep.

    And soon, the Russians are going to have some friendly competition in the quest to sample ice-covered lakes that have been cut off for millennia. [Race to the South Pole in Images]

    Teams from the United States and the United Kingdom are set to begin their own drilling projects to long-buried Antarctic lakes, and have the advantage of state-of-the-art equipment designed specifically for the task.

    Both the British and American teams are using hot-water drills which can reach their targets in mere days, and have the ability to retrieve liquid samples from throughout the lakes' depth, including sediment at the bottom, and the samples can be brought back to the surface within 24 hours.

    The British are poised to begin drilling to Lake Ellsworth, a lake in West Antarctica buried beneath 2 miles (3 km) of ice, in autumn 2012, and may be the first team to put Antarctic lake water under a microscope.

    Rumors and speculation

    Today's announcement comes amid a flurry of rumors and exaggerated reporting surrounding the Lake Vostok project, which some have likened to the plot of a science fiction movie.

    At least one Russian news outlet reported on Monday that an anonymous source said the team had reached the lake, then went on to discuss rumors that Vostok Station, established by the Soviets in 1957, was also the site of a long-lost Nazi hideout, and that German submarines brought Hitler's and Eva Braun's remains to Antarctica for cloning purposes.

    Days before that, some American and British news outlets circulated reports that the scientists working at Vostok Station had lost radio contact with the outside world and were missing or in danger. That was never the case. "I never said that the Russians were lost, as [other news organizations] indicated," John Priscu, an American microbiologist and veteran Antarctic researcher who has been in intermittent contact with St. Petersburg during the 2011-2012 field season, told OurAmazingPlanet in an email.

    After more than a decade of work, and at least two seasons when the team came agonizingly close to reaching Lake Vostok, today's announcement was a welcome one, and coincides with Russia's Day of Science, celebrated on Feb. 8.

    "This achievement of Russian polar researchers and engineers has been a wonderful gift," concluded the press release from the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute.

    When asked if, after so many years, it was exciting to finally reach Lake Vostok, Lesenkov replied in restrained fashion.

    "Da," he said. "Yes."

    It did sound as though he was smiling.

    Reach Andrea Mustain at amustain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @AndreaMustain. Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet and on Facebook.

     

    34 comments

    • PaineM  •  3 mths ago
      X-Files: The Movie.... Instead of a lake they find a massive spaceship that's holding Aliens that have been in stasis for eons, and there is a defense system that will spray then with an Alien virus the likes that will make the worse man-known virus look like the common cold. They have doomed us all, and the aliens will become the overlords of those that survive.

      Or "The Thing" will happen and it wouldn't be destroyed this time, but successfully integrate into a human body and make it's way to the rest of the world
    • Dr Woo Hoo  •  3 mths ago
      I just read a paper on this - the lake water is probably so rich in oxygen that it might have killed all the bacteria in the water. The samples I read about that were taken from ice above the lake had 200-300 bacteria/ml, if I recall correctly. As for oxygen levels, normal water is on the order of 10mg/liter. The lake is expected to have on the order of 1000mg/liter. That is a LOT. The O2 begins to act like a disinfectant at those levels (like the disinfecting oxygen given off by hydrogen peroxide used to clean wounds).

      On a long tangent, might I add you should not use peroxide to clean wounds anymore unless it is essential. Medical science now realizes it damages the human tissue, not just the bacteria.
      • PaineM 3 mths ago
        so high chance of no bacteria, unless they changed to fit their environment, what about any viruses that may be in the lake? there is a difference between bacteria and virus after all
      • illuminatus 3 mths ago
        Thanks for the info. Doc. Thumbs up.
    • Tom  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      Buried for 14 million years? So that's why Joan Rivers is back in the news!
    • THE BANISHED  •  3 mths ago
      I for one WELCOME our new Antarctic Lake Alien Overlords..............
    • Justin  •  3 mths ago
      “ It was a terrible, indescribable thing vaster than any subway train—a shapeless congeries of protoplasmic bubbles, faintly self-luminous, and with myriads of temporary eyes forming and un-forming as pustules of greenish light all over the tunnel-filling front that bore down upon us, crushing the frantic penguins and slithering over the glistening floor that it and its kind had swept so evilly free of all litter. ”

      — H. P. Lovecraft, At The Mountains of Madness

      We didn't listen...
    • donald  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Sooooo no one told them that if they melt the ice at the top they would have fresh water??? lol. Joking aside I look forward to hearing about what they learn.
      • Rob 3 mths ago
        The problem is melting that much ice.
    • none  •  3 mths ago
      Here is the problem with the world, instead of being a collaboration everything is a competition!! "And soon, the Russians are going to have some friendly competition in the quest to sample ice-covered lakes that have been cut off for millennia."
    • Dean  •  3 mths ago
      I find it interesting and am awaiting results no matter what the results are.
    • The Wiz  •  Winter Park, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      Success! Russian Team Breaches Buried Antarctic Lake,,,, gets eaten by large prehistoric fish! Film at eleven!
    • Ray  •  Lubbock, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      ummm . why ?
    • Jim  •  3 mths ago
      Drilling since the 1990's? Now that's what I call BORING.
      • rusty 3 mths ago
        Clever! Made my day.
      • rusty 3 mths ago
        Clever! Made my day.
    • Bill C  •  Morris, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      I am concerned about the bacteria, spores, and other biologicals that we presently have no immunity against. These critters have been separated from the rest of the world for thousands, if not millions, of years.

      It would be nice if someone talked about the accurracy of the Peiri Reis map.

      Bill C.
      • Rob 3 mths ago
        We're not adapated to them, but they're not adapted to us either. They probably can't survive in a warm environment to begin with, let alone a warm-blooded animal. Our immune system constantly comes across things it hasn't seen before, and it responds appropriately. We really don't have anything to worry about.
      • Rob 3 mths ago
        Piri Reis map? Really? You think that is somehow relevant to this story?
      • Bill C 3 mths ago
        How did the lake's location match that in the map ? I wonder if any other bases were chosen based on information in the map. In case you didn't know that map shows the land under the ice in Antartica.

        Bill C.
    • Sgt Schultz  •  3 mths ago
      ACHTUNG.... I hope they don't release some ancient killer virus.... Never trusted those Rooskies... Your PAPERS, Please
      • THE BANISHED 3 mths ago
        Ah comrade...perhaps a small vist to the Russian front is to your liking ..........
    • Dr Woo Hoo  •  3 mths ago
      The Thing has been released.
    • Tax the church  •  3 mths ago
      I hope the aliens win this time
    • Jake  •  Dallas, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      I wonder if anyone used the water that shot up the hole as a home made buday?
    • D  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 mths ago
      COOL! Let's hope they have released some ancient virus that wipes out 95% of the world population!
    • Tom  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      Only the Russians could take 40 years to drill through miles of ice to reach a lake and not have the ability to sample the lake's water. Thank God they aren't doing something more profound like supplying the International Space Station. Oh, wait......
    • Robert  •  3 mths ago
      hopefully a new disease gets released that causes human beings to care about their environment and put the future well-being of their grandchildren ahead of short-term private benefit!
    • Bookaroo  •  Colorado Springs, Colorado  •  3 mths ago
      They never would have tried it if they had known it was not a lake of Vodka
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