A new record with 3,413 meters drilling of Antarctic ice and opened a gateway to a Lake Frozen in time
China’s 42nd Antarctic expedition has set a new record with the country’s first hot-water drilling experiment on the Antarctic ice sheet, reaching a depth of 3,413 meters and surpassing the previous global mark of 2,540 meters. A jet of near-boiling water just opened a path to something buried under 3.4 kilometers of Antarctic ice. What waited below has been sealed since before recorded time. A narrow column of near-boiling water burned through more than three km's of Antarctic ice in early February, carving a clean shaft down to a lake sealed from the surface for millions of years. When the drill reached its target, China’s 42nd Antarctic expedition team had punched through 3,413 meters of ice, breaking the previous global record for hot-water ice drilling by nearly 900 meters. China’s Ministry of Natural Resources announced the achievement. The depth eclipsed the old benchmark of 2,540 meters and, the ministry said, now gives Chinese researchers the ability to drill into more than 90% of the Antarctic ice sheet and the entire Arctic ice sheet. The team deployed the drill above Qilin Subglacial Lake, one of the largest buried lakes discovered in Antarctica. China formally named the lake in 2022. It sits in Princess Elizabeth Land, roughly 120 km's from the country’s Taishan Station, deep in the East Antarctic interior.
Polar hot-water drilling is a cutting-edge research method to study Earth’s ancient environmental changes, predict climate change, explore the limits of life and expand human knowledge, according to Xinhua. For the Chinese team, this was a full-system trial under real polar conditions. The ministry’s statement noted that engineers had to integrate multiple pieces of equipment purpose-built for extreme cold. They solved problems that no previous domestic expedition had tackled: keeping the system stable at low temperatures, preventing surface contamination from entering the borehole, and managing the long hoses and winches with precision as the drill descended through thousands of meters of ice. Compared with traditional mechanical ice drilling, hot-water drilling offers greater penetration capability, higher drilling efficiency, less disturbance to the ice and greater ease in achieving large-diameter, clean operations. It enables efficient access to key interfaces such as subglacial lakes, the underside of ice shelves, and subglacial bedrock, making it the mainstream technology internationally for studying the deep environments of polar ice sheets and ice shelves.
The method is simpler than it sounds. A surface unit heats water and pumps it at high pressure down a long hose. The hot water melts the ice on contact, and the hose descends as the borehole deepens. No grinding bits. No mechanical cutting. The result is a wide, clean hole that opens fast. The advantages over traditional mechanical drilling are substantial. Hot-water drilling causes far less disturbance to the surrounding ice. It leaves behind a contamination-free channel, a requirement that becomes non-negotiable when the target is a subglacial lake isolated for millennia. Mechanical drills risk carrying surface microbes, fuel or drilling fluid into pristine environments. A properly managed hot-water system reduces that risk sharply. Those qualities explain why the technique has become the mainstream choice internationally for reaching subglacial lakes, ice shelf bases and bedrock interfaces. The test demonstrated that the equipment works efficiently and stably in the environment it was designed for. The ministry’s announcement also underlined the mission’s focus on “green exploration” and environmentally responsible technology.
Subglacial lakes are so isolated that their waters function as natural time capsules. Cut off from sunlight and atmosphere, any microbes living inside have adapted to extreme pressure and near-total darkness. Their chemistry records ancient climate conditions. Their sediments hold geological stories that surface rocks cannot tell. These environments also serve as planetary analogs. Scientists studying icy moons like Europa and Enceladus, where liquid oceans are thought to exist beneath frozen crusts, look to Antarctica’s buried lakes for clues about how life might survive in similar conditions elsewhere in the solar system. The primary objective of this test was to demonstrate the application of a deep ice-sheet hot-water and thermal-melting drilling systems in Antarctica. By drilling through the ice sheet above the Qilin Subglacial Lake, it provided a contamination-free access channel and key technical support for subsequent in situ observations of the subglacial lake, as well as for collecting water and lakebed samples. Hot-water drilling gives researchers a direct path to other world. A clean borehole allows instruments to be lowered into the lake, water samples collected and sediment cores pulled from the lakebed without introducing contamination that would ruin the scientific value of the material. The test concentrated on proving that the access route could be established.
China’s 42nd Antarctic expedition has pushed forward on multiple fronts this season. In January, the team began formal operations at the Zhongshan-Taishan Ice Cap Atmospheric and Ocean Observation Station, a new inland facility on the East Antarctic Plateau built for sustained climate and environmental monitoring. The experiment targeted an ice sheet more than 3,000 meters thick, integrating multiple types of equipment suited to polar field conditions and meeting the requirements for high-precision, rapid, and clean drilling. The drilling result adds a subsurface dimension to that expanding research presence. By operating successfully, the team showed the hot-water drilling system can handle the most demanding targets on the continent. The operation signals a technical arrival. With this test, China joins a small group of nations that have demonstrated deep ice drilling capability in polar regions. When the sampling mission returns through that borehole, the investigation of one of Antarctica’s most isolated environments will enter a new stage. The next logical phase will involve sending sampling equipment through that borehole to capture the first direct measurements and biological samples from Qilin Subglacial Lake. Researchers overcame key technical challenges to achieve efficient, stable and clean drilling and filled a domestic gap in this field, showcasing China’s “green expedition” and “environmentally friendly technology” concepts.
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