Author:
Johnsen Sigfús J.,Hansen Steffen Bo,Sheldon Simon G.,Dahl-Jensen Dorthe,Steffensen Jørgen P.,Augustin Laurent,Journé Paul,Alemany Olivier,Rufli Henry,Schwander Jakob,Azuma Nobuhiko,Motoyama Hideaki,Popp Trevor,Talalay Pavel,Thorsteinsson Thorsteinn,Wilhelms Frank,Zagorodnov Victor
Abstract
AbstractIn the mid-1990s, excellent results from the GRIP and GISP2 deep drilling projects in Greenland opened up funding for continued ice-coring efforts in Antarctica (EPICA) and Greenland (NorthGRIP). The Glaciology Group of the Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, was assigned the task of providing drilling capability for these projects, as it had done for the GRIP project. The group decided to further simplify existing deep drill designs for better reliability and ease of handling. The drill design decided upon was successfully tested on Hans Tausen Ice Cap, Peary Land, Greenland, in 1995. The 5.0m long Hans Tausen (HT) drill was a prototype for the ~11m long EPICA and NorthGRIP versions of the drill which were mechanically identical to the HT drill except for a much longer core barrel and chips chamber. These drills could deliver up to 4m long ice cores after some design improvements had been introduced. The Berkner Island (Antarctica) drill is also an extended HT drill capable of drilling 2 m long cores. The success of the mechanical design of the HT drill is manifested by over 12 km of good-quality ice cores drilled by the HT drill and its derivatives since 1995.
Publisher
International Glaciological Society
Cited by
44 articles.
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