MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia said on Wednesday it had pierced through
Antarctica's frozen crust to a vast, subglacial lake that has lain
untouched for at least 14 million years hiding what scientists believe
may be unknown organisms and clues to life on other planets.
Sealed deep under the ice sheet, Lake Vostok is one of the
world's last unexplored frontiers. Scientists suspect its depths may
reveal new life forms and a glimpse of the planet before the ice age.
If life is found in the lake's icy darkness, it may provide the
best answer yet to whether life can exist in the extreme conditions on
Mars or Jupiter's moon Europa.
"The 57th Russian Antarctic expedition has penetrated the waters
of the subglacial Lake Vostok," Valery Lukin, head of the Russian
Antarctic expedition, said in a statement.
After 20 years of stop-go drilling, the Russian team raced to
chew through the final metres of ice and breached Lake Vostok in time to
take the last flight out on February 6 before the onset of Antarctica's
harsh winter. It was here that the coldest temperature found on Earth,
minus 89.2 Celsius (minus 128.6 Fahrenheit), was recorded.
Lukin said the breakthrough came on February 5, on the eve of the
mission's departure: "At a depth of 3,769 metres (12,365 ft) the drill
bit made contact with the real body of water.
"The discovery of this lake is comparable to the first space
flight in its technological complexity, its importance and its
uniqueness," Lukin told Interfax.
But Russia must wait for the Antarctic summer to collect and
study water samples, leaving the door open for U.S. and British missions
to explore two other subglacial lakes and beat it to be the first to
answer the question of whether life exists under the polar ice.
"We call it extraterrestrial life," Russian astrobiologist Sergei
Bulat told Vesti 24 state television. "It will be useful to the search
for life on other icy planets like Jupiter's satellite Europa."
EXPLORATORY RUSH
A century after the first expeditions to the South Pole, the
discovery of Antarctica's hidden network of subglacial lakes via
satellite imagery in the late 1990s set off a new exploratory fervour
among scientists the world over.
"This is scientific exploration, this is work that no one has
ever done before," Martin Siegert, head of the University of Edinburgh's
School of Geosciences, told Reuters.
"This is probably one of the last frontiers on our planet that
remains largely unknown to us," said Siegert, who is leading a British
expedition to explore Lake Ellsworth in West Antarctica in 2012-2013.
Experts say the ice sheet acts like a blanket, trapping in the
Earth's geothermal heat and preventing Antarctic lakes from freezing.
If there is life in Vostok and other ice-bound lakes, it is
unlikely to be anything more complicated than single-cell organisms
adapted to survive in the high-pressure, sunless environment, Siegert
said.
"It is just imagination, we don't really know until we go in," he said.
Beneath the vast white landscape, Lake Vostok is the deepest and
most isolated of Antarctica's subglacial lakes. Its size compares to
Siberia's Lake Baikal or one of the Great Lakes, increasing the chance
of biodiversity in its waters.
Scientists estimate the body of water is roughly 1 million years
old and supersaturated with oxygen, resembling no other known
environment on Earth.
John Priscu of Montana State University suspects that an oasis of life may lurk there, teeming around thermal vents.
"I hope that they can confirm
unequivocally that there is indeed microbial life in the lake," said
Priscu, the chief scientist on the U.S. project to probe subglacial Lake
Whillans.
ALIEN LIFE
Russia has dreamed of
uncovering the lake's secrets since the 1996 discovery that the
low-lying buildings and radio towers of its Antarctic station sit above
the ancient waters.
But the drive to explore this unspoilt environment is not without controversy.
The Russian borehole, pumped
full of kerosene and freon to keep it from freezing shut, hangs like a
needle over the pristine lake. "The ice core at Vostok is there and it
won't go away because it is full of anti-freeze," said Siegert.
In a bid to address international concerns, Russia halted drilling for several years to devise a cleaner method in 2000.
It used a smaller thermal
drill to punch through to the lake and back pressured the borehole to
force lake water to rise up into it, effectively sipping up samples from
the lake's surface.
Russia will core out the frozen sample next season.

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