20 Million Year Old Lake In Antarctica About To Be Uncovered

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PostMon Feb 06, 2012 9:29 pm » by Abdul14


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About 4km under the ice is Lake Vostok, which hasn’t seen the light of day in 20 million years. It’s taken almost 20 years of drilling, but Russian scientists are about to break through and explore the lake at the bottom of the world.

Vostok is thought to hold more fresh water than any other lake in the world, and is the third-largest by volume overall. To give you a sense of just how deep it is, it’s kept liquid by heat from the core of the planet. And the Russian drilling is being staged at Antarctica’s Vostok Station, which itself is built at the Southern Cold Pole — basically, the coldest point on Earth. Scientists are giddy over the possibility of observing life that’s been completely undisturbed for millions of years, ince back when Antartica was attached to Australia.

The easy joke is to wonder aloud what horrors are going to escape — Old Atlantis buried beneath Antartica is already an ongoing Marvel Comics plot — but even scarier for the scientists on the scene is the chance that they might find nothing at all. That would be heartbreaking for the people who’ve spent decades doing research in an incredibly cold and inhospitable climate.

And then there’s the worst-case scenario: That the lake is irrevocably tainted before any research can be conducted at all. If a drill breaks too far into the water, it could contaminate samples. There could be a gaseous explosion when the drill bit breaks through, the result of which would be like shaking up a can of soda and popping it open, creating an enormous geyser and destroying much of the subterranean ecosystem. As one scientist that the Washington Post interviewed says, “If it doesn’t go well, it casts a pall over the whole effort to explore this wet underside of Antarctica.”

But if all does goes well? The implications are unfathomable not just for the fleshing out of Earth’s historical record, but the prospects of life on distant celestial bodies. Moons of Jupiter and Saturn, and presumably many exoplanets, have similar icy surfaces that might hide lakes like Vostok. And could host similar life forms.

So there’s a giant and ancient lake that’s warmed by the planet’s core buried beneath the coldest point on Earth, and whatever organisms found there might lead to breakthroughs in the study of interstellar life. The Russians have been digging there for decades and are about to break through. The results could be traumatic, life-altering or both.

Who needs Marvel?

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PostMon Feb 06, 2012 9:33 pm » by Fatdogmendoza


abdul14 wrote:Image

About 4km under the ice is Lake Vostok, which hasn’t seen the light of day in 20 million years. It’s taken almost 20 years of drilling, but Russian scientists are about to break through and explore the lake at the bottom of the world.

Vostok is thought to hold more fresh water than any other lake in the world, and is the third-largest by volume overall. To give you a sense of just how deep it is, it’s kept liquid by heat from the core of the planet. And the Russian drilling is being staged at Antarctica’s Vostok Station, which itself is built at the Southern Cold Pole — basically, the coldest point on Earth. Scientists are giddy over the possibility of observing life that’s been completely undisturbed for millions of years, ince back when Antartica was attached to Australia.

The easy joke is to wonder aloud what horrors are going to escape — Old Atlantis buried beneath Antartica is already an ongoing Marvel Comics plot — but even scarier for the scientists on the scene is the chance that they might find nothing at all. That would be heartbreaking for the people who’ve spent decades doing research in an incredibly cold and inhospitable climate.

And then there’s the worst-case scenario: That the lake is irrevocably tainted before any research can be conducted at all. If a drill breaks too far into the water, it could contaminate samples. There could be a gaseous explosion when the drill bit breaks through, the result of which would be like shaking up a can of soda and popping it open, creating an enormous geyser and destroying much of the subterranean ecosystem. As one scientist that the Washington Post interviewed says, “If it doesn’t go well, it casts a pall over the whole effort to explore this wet underside of Antarctica.”

But if all does goes well? The implications are unfathomable not just for the fleshing out of Earth’s historical record, but the prospects of life on distant celestial bodies. Moons of Jupiter and Saturn, and presumably many exoplanets, have similar icy surfaces that might hide lakes like Vostok. And could host similar life forms.

So there’s a giant and ancient lake that’s warmed by the planet’s core buried beneath the coldest point on Earth, and whatever organisms found there might lead to breakthroughs in the study of interstellar life. The Russians have been digging there for decades and are about to break through. The results could be traumatic, life-altering or both.

Who needs Marvel?



Now that is an interesting post to say the very least :flop:
Would somebody please slap Jessie J......PLEASE!

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PostMon Feb 06, 2012 9:42 pm » by Mrmcnuggets


fatdogmendoza wrote:
abdul14 wrote:Image

About 4km under the ice is Lake Vostok, which hasn’t seen the light of day in 20 million years. It’s taken almost 20 years of drilling, but Russian scientists are about to break through and explore the lake at the bottom of the world.

Vostok is thought to hold more fresh water than any other lake in the world, and is the third-largest by volume overall. To give you a sense of just how deep it is, it’s kept liquid by heat from the core of the planet. And the Russian drilling is being staged at Antarctica’s Vostok Station, which itself is built at the Southern Cold Pole — basically, the coldest point on Earth. Scientists are giddy over the possibility of observing life that’s been completely undisturbed for millions of years, ince back when Antartica was attached to Australia.

The easy joke is to wonder aloud what horrors are going to escape — Old Atlantis buried beneath Antartica is already an ongoing Marvel Comics plot — but even scarier for the scientists on the scene is the chance that they might find nothing at all. That would be heartbreaking for the people who’ve spent decades doing research in an incredibly cold and inhospitable climate.

And then there’s the worst-case scenario: That the lake is irrevocably tainted before any research can be conducted at all. If a drill breaks too far into the water, it could contaminate samples. There could be a gaseous explosion when the drill bit breaks through, the result of which would be like shaking up a can of soda and popping it open, creating an enormous geyser and destroying much of the subterranean ecosystem. As one scientist that the Washington Post interviewed says, “If it doesn’t go well, it casts a pall over the whole effort to explore this wet underside of Antarctica.”

But if all does goes well? The implications are unfathomable not just for the fleshing out of Earth’s historical record, but the prospects of life on distant celestial bodies. Moons of Jupiter and Saturn, and presumably many exoplanets, have similar icy surfaces that might hide lakes like Vostok. And could host similar life forms.

So there’s a giant and ancient lake that’s warmed by the planet’s core buried beneath the coldest point on Earth, and whatever organisms found there might lead to breakthroughs in the study of interstellar life. The Russians have been digging there for decades and are about to break through. The results could be traumatic, life-altering or both.

Who needs Marvel?



Now that is an interesting post to say the very least :flop:


Definitely. Abdul you get a star today for not having a thread about islam/jewish discrepancies.
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PostMon Feb 06, 2012 9:45 pm » by Dagnamski


Maybe they will find super jewish fish down there! :o
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PostMon Feb 06, 2012 9:47 pm » by Troll2rocks


I thought they were going to stop drilling when they were 100 ft from the lake surface, as the bore holes they use to drill have to be filled with oil, and breaking through and contaminating that pristine water (and possible untouched life) would be catastrophic. What changed ? I heard they stopped doing the drilling until a completely safe and clean way of access the water could be found, any information on this aspect anyone ?
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PostMon Feb 06, 2012 9:53 pm » by Fatdogmendoza


dagnamski wrote:Maybe they will find super jewish fish down there! :o


You seem very familiar bro :headscratch:
Would somebody please slap Jessie J......PLEASE!

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