Dear Listmembers,
  Another impact crater news report.  Dirk Ross...Tokyo

ScienceDaily (Dec. 22, 2008)
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/12/081220084841.htm

"Under Frozen Lake in Siberia, Geoscientists Drill For Secrets of Earth's 
Ancient Climate"
ScienceDaily (Dec. 22, 2008) — In the next few days, a convoy of bulldozers and 
trucks will set out from a remote airport in Siberia, heading for a frozen lake 
62 miles north of the Arctic Circle, but the trip isn’t a holiday visit to the 
North Pole. Instead, the trucks will deliver core-drilling equipment for a 
study of sediment and meteorite-impact rocks that should provide the longest 
time-continuous climate record ever collected in the Arctic.

Once in place next month, the drilling will allow an international team of 
geoscientists led by Julie Brigham-Grette of the University of Massachusetts 
Amherst and Martin Melles of the University of Cologne, Germany, to burrow back 
in time, retrieving core samples more than 3 million years old and answering 
questions about Earth’s ancient past.

Almost impossibly remote, Lake El’gygytgyn (pronounced el’geegitgin), 11 miles 
in diameter, was formed 3.6 million years ago when a monster meteor, more than 
a half-mile across, slammed into the Earth between the Arctic Ocean and the 
Bering Sea. Because this part of the Arctic was never covered by ice sheets or 
glaciers, it has received a steady drift of sediment – as much as a quarter 
mile (1,312 feet or 400 meters) deep – since impact. Thus, it offers a 
continuous depositional record unlike any other in the world, say 
Brigham-Grette and colleagues, beneath the crater lake that’s just over 560 
feet deep, equal to the height of the Washington Monument.

This week’s convoy will take 25 days to crawl through the frozen dark, building 
a 224-mile ice road as they go, over which the heavy drilling equipment can be 
moved from the remote airstrip at Pevek, in the north of Russia’s Chukotka 
Autonomous Region. “Lake El’gygytgyn is logistically among the most difficult 
places on Earth to carry out a scientific drilling program,” Brigham-Grette 
acknowledges. But by all accounts, the rewards should be worth all the effort.

In preparation for this day, scientists from institutes in Germany, Russia and 
Austria as well as UMass Amherst have been flying in by helicopter for focused 
tests over the past 10 years, drilling pilot cores and taking other samples and 
measurements. The site has passed every test. For example, the lake bed has 
been undisturbed by earthquakes, other underground shifting or drying for 
thousands of years. Pilot cores of 16.7 meters long (54 feet) have already 
provided a snapshot of climate from 300,000 years ago.

El’gygytgyn thus offers a truly unprecedented and ideal opportunity, 
Brigham-Grette notes, for piecing together a clearer picture of the 
hemisphere’s prehistoric climate and the dynamic processes of global climate 
change since the meteor’s impact. Notably, the researchers hope they can learn 
more about the unexplained shift from a warm forest ecology to permafrost, some 
2 million to 3 million years ago. Comparing cores from under Lake El’gygytgyn 
to those from lower latitudes will help the climate scientists with a 
high-resolution tool to study climatic change across northeast Asia “at 
millennial timescales,” Brigham-Grette says. In addition to climate data, cores 
may offer the researchers an opportunity to study the 3.6-million-year-old 
“impact breccia,” that is, how Earth’s bedrock responded to the meteor’s impact.

Some sampling began in November at the science camp drilling site on the 
lakeshore, where researchers will study the climate history of the permafrost 
(frozen ground) that surrounds the lake. The other two drill sites will be in 
the deepest part of the lake. Waiting until Arctic winter to transport and 
install the equipment, the team can use the frozen lake surface to support 
drills specially designed to withstand the extreme weather conditions. The 
scientists plan to start drilling overlapping cores at these frigid locations 
in February using the windswept lake ice as a drilling platform. Sampling will 
continue until May 2009, as part of the International Continental Scientific 
Drilling Program (ICDP).

To ensure the safety of both scientists and drill-team members on the isolated 
lake in potentially life-threatening conditions, Brigham-Grette and colleagues 
have scrutinized how the ice shifts, cracks, and responds to heavy wind and 
circulation forces before settling on rig placement. Workers and scientists 
will live in a protected personnel carrier that will also transport cores from 
the rig on the lake ice to the science camp on the shore.

Sediment cores will be processed for shipment and stored at the lake in a 
temperature-controlled container until they can be flown to St. Petersburg and 
later trucked to the University of Cologne, Germany, for study by the 
international team. An “archive half” of each core will also be stored at the 
University of Minnesota.

The international collaboration is funded by the U.S. National Science 
Foundation, the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research, the Alfred 
Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, and 
GeoForschungsZentrum, Potsdam. In addition to UMass Amherst, investigators from 
the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Far East Geological Institute, Vladivostok, 
the Northeast Interdisciplinary Scientific Research Institute, Magadan, and 
Roshydromet’s Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, St. Petersburg, are 
taking part.


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Adapted from materials provided by University of Massachusetts Amherst.

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