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June
5, 2007 Mahlon "Chuck"
Kennicutt II, professor of oceanography and director of the Sustainable
Development Program in Texas A&M's Office of the Vice President
for
Research, says the National Science Foundation and 11 countries
involved in the
research and exploration are seeking agreement on how best to study
these
unique environments, which include at least 145 lakes under
Antarctica’s
massive ice sheets. Several of the lakes are immense, and one, Participants in the
project known
as The Russian Antarctic Expedition have announced their intentions to
penetrate "These lakes were
rediscovered within the past 10 years or so, but no one yet has
penetrated them
and we want to make sure that the research is done properly and adheres
to the
highest environmental stewardship principles," says Kennicutt, who also
serves as a director of the SALE (Subglacial Antarctic Lake
Environments)
office, which is maintained at Texas A&M. "This has the
potential to
be one of the most important scientific discoveries in years, since
sub-ice
water appears to be an important player in many different processes
fundamental
to "We believe that
these lakes
are part of an interconnected system that spans the entire Antarctic
continent,” he adds. “These bodies of water are
several miles beneath the ice
sheet which took millions of years to form, meaning these lakes have
been
undisturbed and disconnected from our atmosphere for hundreds of
thousands of
years. It is highly likely that unique microbial communities that we
never knew
existed are lake residents." A group of
scientists, including
Kennicutt, who also serves as an adviser to the National Science
Foundation,
the agency that funds and oversees all Scientists from the
countries
involved, which include the U.S., France, Italy, Japan, Russia, the
United
Kingdom and others, have concluded that lake entry and sampling will
ultimately
be necessary to accomplish the ambitious research objectives, Kennicutt
notes. "How to do this in
the best
way to preserve these environments and to be least invasive is a key
question
that needs further discussion," he notes. "The countries
involved have
all agreed we must do as much as possible to avoid altering the lakes
or
causing any environmental damage." Research in It is the only
continent on Earth
that is managed through an international treaty signed by 45 countries
representing two-thirds of the world’s population. By
unanimous consent of
these nations, The Department of
State
coordinates "We are probably 3-5
years
away from conducting "We believe these
lakes may
exert important controls on large ice sheet movement and that they are
just
like above-groundwater systems and include a range of features such as
streams,
rivers and lakes, only they are under kilometers of ice. Once the
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