Concordia – Research Station at the End of the World
 
These  pictures could easily be publicity stills from a new science fiction  blockbuster set on an ice bound planet circling a distant sun. It is,  however, the Concordia Research Station which is located on the  Antarctic Plateau in Antartcica – the largest desert in the world.  It  is one of only three research stations on the plateau to operate  permanently on a year round basis.
Opened in 2005, the station which is  run jointly by France and Italy is over 500 kilometers away from the  nearest human presence on the plateau, those who reside in the Russian  station Vostok.
It is over 1000 kilometers away from all other permanent and semi-permanent stations in Antarctica which means that this may well be the most isolated human outpost on the planet.
It is over 1000 kilometers away from all other permanent and semi-permanent stations in Antarctica which means that this may well be the most isolated human outpost on the planet.
It sits atop Dome Charlie (otherwise  known as Dome C or Dome Circe) which is a naturally occurring dome (or  summit) of the Antarctic Ice Sheet.  It is a staggering 3233 meters  above sea level.  One of the coldest places on earth, Dome C has an  average summer temperature of −25°C.  In the winter the temperature  often goes below −80°C and it is also incredibly dry.  The humidity is  low and there is hardly and precipitation at all.
The project goes back to 1992  when the French decided that a new station should be built on Dome C –  they were later joined by Italy and formed a summer camp there.  Fully  operational by 2005 the research station saw its first 13 person  winter-over the same year.
The actual construction and  running of the facility was one of the two primary objectives – enough  of a labor in itself to qualify.  The other was to provide support in  logistics for the European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica –  otherwise known as EPICA.  EPICA aims to fully document the atmospheric  and climatic record which this unique place has naturally archived in  its core.  Atronomy has more recently been introduced as a third  objective.
Two ice cores are to be fully drilled  and these will be compared to two similar projects in Greenland.  It is  hoped that the information within the cores will give a vast insight in  to what extent our climate has a natural variability.  Additionally –  and extremely relevant today – the research station is discovering vast  new swathes of information about the mechanisms of rapid climatic change  – as it happened during the earth’s last glacial epoch. The core goes  back quite a time – 740,000 years and has revealed information about the  last 8 glacial cycles.   
So how do people (and equipment) get  to Concordia (named incidentally after the Greek goddess of agreement  and harmony)?  The heavy cargo arrives by traverse from its first point  at the Dumont d’Urville Station – a mere 1,100 kilometers away.  The  journey takes between seven and twelve days – very much dependent on  what the weather is like at the time.
Personnel and lighter cargo are  somewhat luckier.  A few hours in the air and they arrive either from  Dumont d’Urville or the similarly distanced Mario Zuchelli Station.  The  Twin Otter aircraft used need to be thoroughly checked for flight  capability before they take off on their return journey.
Why astronomy on the Antarctic  Plateau? To begin with there is hardly any light pollution at Dome C –  and there is of course the additional benefit of continuous night for  three months of the year.  Then there is the natural stability of the  atmosphere.  We have already mentioned the low humidity at the site –  and this is the third feature which makes Dome C an excellent place for  astronomy.
As the world’s largest desert, the  Antarctic Plateau is a formidable and difficult environment.  There are  absolutely no plants or animals (multi cellular at least) after around  twenty kilometers in from the Southern Ocean.  The occasional skua (a  long distance migratory seabird pictured above) has been spotted above  the station however.  The scientists believe that the birds have somehow  discovered a way to cross the continent rather than circumnavigating  it.  Other than an infrequent visit from a skua the people at Concordia  are completely isolated from other life.
















 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
