Scientific forays into the frosted wilds of Antarctica could unlock further mysteries of the universe and help put a man on Mars, with post-quake Christchurch uniquely situated as an ice and space base, a visiting Nasa scientist said today.
While space may be the final frontier, as Star Trek's narrator opined, the White Continent of Antarctica, where few men have gone before, is providing a fertile research ground for advancing space exploration and extra-terrestrial worlds.
Studies into the hostile, barren, cold and dry landscape, along with cutting-edge testing transport methods and technologies to support human life and growth, and astronaut training camps, are some of the benefits of having a presence on the ice, according to Nasa's Zaheer Ali.
"With its topography, geography and weather, it has so many advantageous features," says Ali, science and mission operations laboratory supervisor for the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (Sofia), a highly-modified Boeing jetliner that is the world's largest flying observatory.
• Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy takes to the skies around New Zealand