Monday 22 December 2008

Magic Mountain

Outside the hut it is -29 deg C and blowing 40mph, with blowing snow and only a few metres visibility. That puts the wind chill around -65 deg C. Finally after great weather since we arrived we can take a rest day. Erebus is a beautiful place when it's nice and very unforgiving when it's not.

It's not that often that I get to work on an active volcano, let or lone the only one in Antarctica and one of the highest mountains this side of the continent. Mt Erebus - 3794m and straight up from the sea to form Ross Island. Pretty amazing. A bubbling lava lake, fumaroles, ice caves and rock crystals that are completely unique to this place in the world. And cold. All the time.

After two nights at an acclimatisation camp on Fang Glacier (above) we moved up to the main camp at 3270m. We've been extremely busy since. Firstly installing 80 seismic stations around the Volcano by skidoo, then drilling 15m ice cores all over the place, filling them with explosives and now we're blasting them all.

The surreal view into an ice core hole

Life "upstairs" is as varied as ever - one day drilling holes, another circumnavigating the volcano on skidoo installing seismic stations. Visiting the ice caves on an evening, dealing with helicopters during the day, flying around to recce sites, organising camp. Variety is the spice of life as they say, and this year I have a more varied job than ever. Busy busy with loads going on all the time.

This is me hitching a sling load whilst the 212 Helicopter hovers over my head - an exhilarating experince to say the least!!

There were 14 of us until yesterday and, weather permitting, we'll be down to ten by tomorrow evening for Christmas, just like a big family! Seismic stations out, drilling finished and only another 4 holes to blow. Then the task is to fetch everything in again by the start of January.

Another hard day at the office.


These last four images are of the famous Erebus Ice Caves. The rock is hot but the outside temperature is a max of -20 C. Snow falls and accumulates as ice, but the warm rock beneath hollows out caves from below. The colours inside range from black to blue to white and every shade inbetween. Amazing. We can walk into some, but others require a 20m abseil and a climb back out again. The Fumaroles are ice towers created as the warm moist air hits the cold dry outside and the moisture condenses immediately making a hollow tower that gets bigger until it collapses. The volcano is covered in these towers and caves and I'm on a mission to get into as many as I have time and energy for!

So that's it for the moment. Christmas is around the corner and I'm sending this out at last to wish you all a very Happy Christmas and hopefully I'll have the time to post another blog before the new year. Love to all my family on the big day - I'll be thinking of you on this, my 10th Christmas away from home. Thanks for all the love and support over the years and see you at the end of January!

Tim

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Have a fantastic Christmas and New Year Tim - looking forward to catching up in 2009. Tab xx

Anonymous said...

Amazing pictures of another world on the same planet...Enjoy the festive season x

Anonymous said...

Happy Christmas Tim,
Newcastle is pretty cold and remote (according to some!). Come and visit us when you get back.
Charlotte and Will xxx

cat said...

be entertained