Check out the trailer for his forthcoming film project, Terra Nova: The Antarctica Suite -- it's stuffed to the gills with nerdy factoids about ice, wave acoustics, glacier ecology, and the like.
When we first posted about the multinational effort between Russia, France, and the U.S. to drill near the hidden Lake Vostok in Antarctica, I have to admit I was worried. Not about the Frogs, mind you -- those cowards wouldn't do anything without our say-so. But you can't trust Russians around uncharted territory.
Sadly, I was right about those borscht-eating bastards: Russia plans to drill into the depths of Lake Vostok, ignoring researchers' principal concerns about potentially contaminating the pristine lake. Buried 4 km below Antarctic ice, Lake Vostok could harbor life forms that exist in a similar manner to possible extraterrestrial life in harsh environments like Europa. Introducing outside microbes could irreparably damage scientific efforts, but that seems to matter little to the vodka-swilling, Dostoevsky-reading intruders.
Antarctica's Lake Vostok lies below 4 kilometers of ice, is 15 million years old, and may reveal new organisms that survive in total darkness and cold without sustenance from the sun. It also sounds like the perfect place for the base of an evil genius — I'm planning on looking into real estate promptly.
For five years,a joint team of Russian, American and French scientists have sought to core the ice around the lake, which provides a paleo-climatic record of at least 400,000 years, and maybe as much as a million years. Finally, scientists are now thawing ice segments cut from an 11,866-foot ice core drilled back in 1998. Scientists have been worried about contaminating the lake with microbes from the surface world, but they got around that problem by taking the core from 656 feet above the surface of the lake, two miles below the surface of Antarctica. The ice has since been stored at -35 degrees Celsius at the National Ice Core Laboratory in Denver, where I'm applying for a job tomorrow.