Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Russian scientists drill to sub-glacial Antarctic Vostok lake



From WP

After drilling for two decades through more than two miles of antarctic ice, Russian scientists are on the verge of entering a vast, dark Vostok lake that hasn’t been touched by light for more than 20 million years.

Scientists are enormously excited about what life-forms might be found there but are equally worried about contaminating the lake with drilling fluids and bacteria, and the potentially explosive “de-gassing” of a body of water that has especially high concentrations of oxygen and nitrogen.


To prevent a sudden release of gas, the Russian team will not push the drill far into the lake but just deep enough for a limited amount of water — or the slushy ice on the lake’s surface — to flow up the borehole, where it will then freeze.

Reaching Lake Vostok would represent the first direct contact with what scientists now know is a web of more than 200 subglacial lakes in Antarctica — some of which existed when the continent was connected to Australia and was much warmer.
They stay liquid because of heat from the core of the planet.

“This is a huge moment for science and exploration, breaking through to this enormous lake that we didn’t even know existed until the 1990s,” said John Priscu, a researcher at Montana State University who has long been involved in antarctic research, including a study of Vostok ice cores.

“If it goes well, a breakthrough opens up a whole new chapter in our understanding of our planet and possibly moons in our solar system and planets far beyond,” he said.
“If it doesn’t go well, it casts a pall over the whole effort to explore this wet underside of Antarctica.”

Priscu said Russian scientists on the scene e-mailed him last week to say they had stopped drilling about 40 feet from the expected waterline to measure the pressure levels deep below.
Priscu said he expected that they were also sending down a special “hot water” drill to make the final push, but a message from the Russian team Monday reported “no news.”

If the Russians break through as planned within the next week, it will cap more than 50 years of research in what are considered the harshest conditions in the world — where the surface temperatures drop to 100 degrees below zero.
That extreme cold is likely to return within a few weeks, at the end of the antarctic summer, putting pressure on the Russians to make the final push or pull out until the next antarctic drilling season, starting in December.

The extreme cold, which limited drilling time, contributed to the long duration of the project. The Russian team also ran into delays caused by financial strains and by efforts to address international worries about their drilling operation.

Valery Lukin, who is leading the effort for the Russians, is on the ice.
Last year, he told Reuters that their work is “like exploring an alien planet where no one has been before. We don’t know what we’ll find.”


The ‘crown jewel’

American and English teams are planning drilling campaigns next year into much smaller antarctic lakes as scientists work to understand the dynamics of the continent, which holds more than 70 percent of the world’s fresh water.
But Vostok — where the former Soviet Union began work after the United States settled in at the South Pole more than 50 years ago — is now acknowledged to be the “crown jewel” of Antarctica from a scientific perspective.

In recent years, researchers have discovered that microbes live in the ice wherever they explore in Antarctica, including deep in the Vostok borehole.
This finding has revolutionized thinking about the snow- and ice-covered continent and has encouraged researchers, including Priscu, to conclude that life almost certainly will be found in Vostok and the other subglacial lakes.

Vostok station

If microbes are found in Vostok, the discovery would have particular significance for astrobiology, the search for life beyond Earth.
That’s because Jupiter’s moon Europa and Saturn’s moon Enceladus have deep ice crusts that scientists think cover large amounts of liquid water warmed by sources other than the sun — just like Vostok.

The subglacial Lake Vostok

Because of the stakes involved, the Russian effort has drawn criticism for its extensive use of kerosene, Freon and other chemicals to enable the drilling and to keep the borehole open during the long winter.
Priscu said the Russians have worked with an international group he helped form to come up with cleaner ways to drill the final section of the hole.

Organizations including the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition, which is the official environmental umbrella group sitting at Antarctic Treaty organization meetings, have spoken against the drilling methods used by the Russians.
Some other groups have called for a ban on scientific research beneath the antarctic ice sheet so the area can remain pristine.

Claire Christian, director of the coalition’s secretariat, said her group generally supports study of the subglacial antarctic lakes but wishes that the first entry would not take place at Vostok because of its importance.
Of the Russian team, she said, “They have responded to some concerns but are not drilling to the highest standards available.”
The Russian team could not be reached for comment.

Researchers such as Robin Bell, of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University, said learning more about the subglacial world in Antarctica is essential to understanding the changing climate and how it may effect Earth.
Because the continent has so much of the world’s freshwater ice, significant changes there would have a major impact on sea-level rise.

Bell, who has studied Vostok using satellite imaging and other above-surface instruments, said the lake is part of a complex system in which ice sheets bring in meltwater at their bottoms and later carry refrozen water elsewhere.
She said that although the lake has not “felt the wind” in 20 million to 30 million years, the water in it is not as ancient — in the 100,000s to low millions of years old.
The only ancient water present, she said, is probably in the sediment at the bottom.

She, too, has concerns about contamination and equipment failures but said the Russians see their Vostok work as a high-profile symbol of scientific exploration and prowess and so are taking extra care.

Danger of giant geyser

Vostok, which is about the size of New Jersey, is the world’s third-largest lake by volume of water.
Priscu said the gas in the lake makes it like a can of carbonated soda: Open it under high pressure, and it will spurt out.

He said the doomsday scenario for the Russian breakthrough would be if the suddenly released water pushed its way past machinery to block it and shot up the borehole, which is six to eight inches in diameter at the top.
The result, he said, could be an enormous geyser that could empty a quarter of the lake.
Priscu said he didn’t expect that to happen, but if it did, the sudden addition of substantial water vapor to the antarctic atmosphere could change the continent’s weather in unpredictable ways.

Some American Antarctica specialists think the combination of the Russian technique and the fact that the team is sampling from the “top” of the subterranean lake means that its chances of finding microbes is lower than if it went deeper into the water.
Priscu and his former student Brent Christner, now a professor at Louisiana State University, published a paper in 2006 describing a variety of microbes in a Vostok ice core sample, but the Russian team has generally written off the microbes found as contamination.

American researchers will begin drilling into the Whillans Ice Stream in western Antarctica late this year, and the British will drill into the much deeper Lake Ellsworth, also in western Antarctica.
Both are using techniques more consistent with best drilling practices than the Russians are doing at Vostok and are better equipped to find microbial life.

“Hopefully, all three projects will succeed, and then we’ll enter a new era of science and maybe cooperation,” Priscu said.
“I could imagine an international team going back to Vostok and starting a project to drill much further into the lake with a higher level of technology and innovation.”

Links :

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

New bathymetry in Google Earth


Global seafloor update in Google Earth
To see more of what's changed, Google has created this short video to give you a tour


From Scripps

Internet information giant Google updated ocean data in its Google Earth application this week, reflecting new bathymetry data assembled by Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, NOAA researchers and many other ocean mapping groups from around the world.

The newest version of Google Earth includes more accurate imagery in several key areas of ocean using data collected by research cruises over the past three years.

"The original version of Google Ocean was a newly developed prototype map that had high resolution but also contained thousands of blunders related to the original archived ship data," said David Sandwell, a Scripps geophysicist.
"UCSD undergraduate students spent the past three years identifying and correcting the blunders as well as adding all the multibeam echosounder data archived at the National Geophysical Data Center in Boulder, Colorado."

The Mediterranean Sea: before (left) and after (right) Example of a place you’ll notice an improvement in the ocean terrain data is the Mediterranean Sea, particularly south of Cyprus, where the boundary between the Eurasian and Arabian plates is now more clearly defined.

"The Google map now matches the map used in the research community, which makes the Google Earth program much more useful as a tool for planning cruises to uncharted areas," Sandwell added.

Previous terrain data showed what appeared to be a city grid on the ocean floor (left), which was confused for the lost city of Atlantis.
Updated data more accurately reflects the seafloor terrain (right).

For example, the updated, more precise data corrects a grid-like artifact on the seafloor that was misinterpreted in the popular press as evidence of the lost city of Atlantis off the coast of North Africa.

Guam and Mariana’s Trench before (left) and after (right)
Our last example shows improvements to the land-sea mask along the coastline of Guam.
You’ll notice a dramatic improvement in the resolution of both the coastline and neighboring Mariana’s Trench, the deepest trench in the world.

Through several rounds of upgrades, Google Earth now has 15 percent of the seafloor image derived from shipboard soundings at 1-kilometer resolution.
Previous versions only derived about 10 percent of their data from ship soundings and the rest from depths predicted by Sandwell and NOAA researcher Walter Smith using satellite gravity measurements.
The two developed the prediction technique in 1994.
The satellite and sounding data are combined with land topography from the NASA Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) to create a global topography and bathymetry grid called SRTM30_PLUS.
On 11th January 2012, Google replaced its global bathymetry SRTM30_PLUS V4.0 with the newer version V7.0.
This has increased the area of seafloor covered at 1km resolution from 10% to 15%.
The new version also corrected thousands of errors in the old data and includes all of the multibeam bathymetry data collected by U.S. research vessels over the past three decades including 287 Scripps expeditions from research vessels Washington, Melville and Revelle.
UCSD undergraduate student Alexis Shakas processed all the U.S. multibeam data and then worked with Google researchers on the global integration.

The next major upgrade to the grid will occur later this year using a new gravity model having twice the accuracy of previous models.
The new gravity information is being collected by a European Space Agency satellite called CryoSat that was launched in February 2010.


Data from Scripps, NOAA sharpen resolution of seafloor maps.

By visiting Google Earth, you can use the 'historical imagery' flag to see old versus new.
This KLM File shows some improvements and differences, like Atlantis being less clearly visible, the improvements offshore Ireland and the Mariana Trench, as well as in the Californian Gulf, Great Barrier Reef and the Clarian fracture zone in the Pacific.
Also a sea mount that was vague now is made visible.

Links :

Monday, February 6, 2012

Tasman Sea a “hotspot” for ocean warming

Surface (orange) and deeper (blue) currents are shifting south, bringing warmer waters to the Tasman Sea. (Credit:CSIRO)

From AustraliaGeoGraphic

The temperature of waters east of Tasmania are rising rapidly, as balmy ocean currents shift toward the poles.

THE GLOBAL OCEAN is warming, but some places are feeling the heat more than others.
The Tasman Sea, east of Australia, has been identified in a new study as one of five global ocean "hotspots".

>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

Temperatures here have risen here by 2ÂșC over the past 60 years - three times the average rate of warming in the the world's oceans.
The warming has been triggered by strengthening wind systems - a result of climate change - which have driven warm ocean currents toward the poles, beyond their known boundaries.

The rising temperatures could have stark consequences not only for marine life, but for the ocean's capacity to take up heat and carbon from the atmosphere.

"We have more warm water coming from [just outside the tropics] - that's the major cause of this intense warming," says co-author Dr Wenju Cai, a marine and atmospheric scientist with the CSIRO in Melbourne. "And there's strong support that it's due to climate change."

The study was published this week in the journal, Nature Climate Change. The other four global ocean hotspots occupy the western edges of the North Atlantic, South Atlantic, Indian Ocean and North Pacific

One of the hottest hotspots


Wenju and the team combined computer simulations with long-term observations, including monthly measurements that have been taken by the CSIRO since 1945, to understand how ocean circulation patterns are changing all over the world.


The hotspots have formed where fast-flowing ocean currents carry warm water westward, to arrive at the eastern edge of the major continents. In Australia's case, the East Australian Current has shifted around 350km further south, making the Tasman Sea "one of the hottest hotspots," Wenju told Australian Geographic.

What's most surprising about the results, he says, is that changes in the hotspots have been highly synchronised, which points to a global cause.

" All these major western boundary currents are in fact behaving in the same way," he says. "It really points to a global increase in greenhouse gases as a cause."

Adapt, migrate, or die

Ecosystems in the Tasman Sea are already seeing the effects of rising temperatures. As their environment warms, marine species must adapt, migrate, or face extinction.

"We are seeing a lot of sea urchins migrating south from NSW to Tasmanian water," Wenju says.
"There, they eat out all the Tasmanian kelp."
Because kelp forests provide food and shelter to a huge variety of marine species, their destruction can have severe knock-on effects."

Warming waters have implications for aquaculture, too.
"If you want to farm salmon (the source of a $350 million industry in Tasmania), they need a very particular range of temperatures in order to grow," he says.

Professor Matthew England, joint director of the University of New South Wales' Climate Change Research Centre, agrees that the rising temperatures could have major repercussions for marine life.
"Warming in the Tasman Sea has been particularly rapid," Matthew says. "
And with ecosystems sensitive to temperature change, this has implications for marine life in Australian waters."

Hindering heat absorption

In addition to the ecological effects, elevated temperatures reduce the ability of the ocean to take up heat and carbon from the atmosphere.

When warm water flows into polar areas, it creates a stable layer at the surface - because warm water is lighter.
With the surface layer less intergrated into the deeper ocean, less heat and carbon can be sucked downward.
And this could lead to accelerated warming.

"This is an important study," Matthew says. "It shows how global warming can profoundly alter ocean circulation patterns, which can in turn enhance the rate of warming in certain regions."

The next step in the research, Wenju says, is to deploy a series of moored ocean sensors across the Eastern Australian Current, to monitor changes more accurately. "Because if you want to detect changes associated with global warming," he says, "observing these hotspots will be very effective."

Links :
  • ABC : Scientists say global warming changes currents

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Walk on the wild side

Who's the boss ?



Skipper's biggest challenge :
Getting the keel out of the water and keeping it there requires precision sailing and knowing the boat inside out.
From his position at the helm, Ross Daniel, the skipper cannot see either Alex Thomson or the jet ski, so he relies on the information given to him by the spotter (port side of stern / left back).

Required wind speed: 17 – 19 knots

Required sea state: slight (waves 0.5 – 1.25 metros)
Requires sailing speed: 9 knots
Sailing angle of yacht to lift keel out of the water: 45°
Maximum angle of yacht: 70°
Maximum sailing time with keel out of the water: 45 – 60 seconds

Major risks:
- The boat coming down on top of Alex, the jet ski and its driver.
- The wind is unpredictable; a momentary gust or drop will affect the direction and speed of the boat in an instant.
- The keel hitting Alex – 4 tonnes of lead moving at 10mph – the equivalent of being charged by an elephant!


Saturday, February 4, 2012

Rainbow surfer : the perfect day

Picture perfect: Photographer Zak Noyle (A-Frame / Barcroft Media) snapped the rare natural phenomenon of a rainbow touching down above the head of a surfer off the coast of paradise island Tahiti


Christian Redongo surfs a wave with a rainbow in the background, in Teahupoo, Tahiti, French Polynesia.
This award-winning picture shows land and sea linked by a rainbow.
The surfer may have been left wondering whether a pot of gold could be under his board at the bottom of the ocean. 26-year-old photographer, Zak Noyle from Honolulu, Hawaii, scooped the Surfer Magazine 2011 best photo of the year competition for this picture.

We are used to seeing an awful lot of amazing rainbow pictures.
And great surfing shots.
But rarely do we see them together.
So this jaw-dropping and award-winning picture, showing land and sea linked by a rainbow surfer, got our attention.
The rare moment was captured when a mighty wave, being ridden by a lucky surfer - who must have been left wondering whether the hidden treasure could have been beneath his legs in the bottom of the ocean - and green headland were connected by light refracted by moist French Polynesian air while.

‘That was a trip that I took for a week filming’, said Zak.
‘It was an amazing afternoon with just my friends out in the water.
‘It wasn't huge, but I saw that rainbow forming - it was just a quick moment and only lasted for two waves.
‘I saw it and was like - Oh, that was sick.
‘I saw how it formed and how he stood up - all the elements just came together at that point.’