Electromechanical drilling of a 300 m core in a dry hole at Summit, Greenland
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Description
During the EUROCORE project in 1989 at Summit, Central Greenland, a 304.8-m long ice core of 105mm diameter was retrieved with an electromechanical drill. A dry drilling technique was used in order to minimise contamination of the ice. A special drill head with a small chipping depth was designed to assure minimal fracturing of the core. The quality was excellent to the depth of 180m, but then deteriorated due to increasing brittleness of the ice. Down to 280m we were able to maintain the mean length of unbroken core pieces above 0.1m by reducing the pitch from 7 to 2mm. The sticking of the consequently finer chips to the drill barrels was reduced by treating the barrels repeatedly with a silicone-based wax solution. Hole enlargement cutters near the upper end of the drill head prevented the drill from becoming stuck due to borehole closure.
Date of Publication
1994
Publication Type
Conference Item
Subject(s)
Language(s)
en
Additional Credits
Series
Memoirs of National Institute of Polar Research. Special Issue
Publisher
National Institute of Polar Research
ISSN
0386-0744
Title of Event
Related URL(s)
http://id.nii.ac.jp/1291/00002213
Access(Rights)
open.access