Title Operations overview for the ANDRILL McMurdo Ice Shelf Project, Antarctica
Author Falconer, T.; Pyne, A.; Levy, R.; Olney, M.; Curren, M.; ANtarctic geological DRILLing-McMurdo Ice Shelf (ANDRILL-MIS) Science Team
Author Affil Falconer, T., Victoria University of Wellington, Antarctic Research Centre, Wellington, New Zealand. Other: Northern Illinois University; University of Nebraska-Lincoln; University of Nebraska- Lincoln; Florida State University
Source Studies from the ANDRILL, McMurdo Ice Shelf Project, Antarctica; initial science report on AND-1B, edited by T.R. Naish, R. Powell and R. Levy. Terra Antartica, 14(3), p.131-140, . Publisher: Universita degli Studi di Siena, Sezione Scienze della Terra, Siena, Italy. ISSN: 1122- 8628
Publication Date 2007
Notes In English. 3 refs. GeoRef Acc. No: 284753. CRREL Acc. No: 62005074
Index Terms boreholes; drilling; ice; glacier flow; tides; well logging; Antarctica-- McMurdo Ice Shelf; Southern Ocean--McMurdo Sound; Antarctica--Victoria Land; Southern Ocean--Victoria Land Basin; AND-1B Core; Antarctica; cores; currents; engineering properties; ice movement; marine methods; McMurdo Ice Shelf; McMurdo Sound; methods; ocean circulation; programs; Ross Ice Shelf; Ross Sea; sampling; sea ice; Southern Ocean; techniques; Victoria Land; Victoria Land Basin; well-logging
Abstract During the austral summer of 2006, a record-setting 1 284.87 meter (m)-long rock and sediment core (ANDRILL [AND]-lB) was recovered from beneath the McMurdo Ice Shelf (MIS) in 917 m of water. A custom built drilling system comprising a UDR-1200 rig, jack-up platform, hot water drill, sea riser, and diamond-bit wireline coring string was set up on the McMurdo Ice Shelf approximately 9 kilometers (km) from Scott Base (NZ). The drilling system employed technology developed to handle challenging environmental conditions including an 85 m-thick ice shelf "platform" that moved both laterally and vertically, strong tidal currents, and high winds. Drill site set up commenced on 18 August 2006, and the first core for AND-1B was recovered on 31 October 2006. Drilling operations continued through 26 December 2006. Science operations were conducted at the drill site, in both the borehole and a purpose built laboratory (lab) complex, and at the Crary Science and Engineering Center (CSEC), McMurdo Station (USA). Drill site science operations involved downhole logging, which was carried out in the borehole casing and in parts of the open hole, fracture studies, and physical properties measurements. Core was transported from the drill site to McMurdo Station, where it was split, scanned, described, and sampled for initial characterization. Once initial studies were completed, the core was packed into crates for shipment to the Antarctic Research Facility (ARF; core respository) at Florida State University in the United States.
Publication Type journal article
Record ID 84148