. 24/7 Space News .
Norway: Noah's Ark of seed samples tucked into Arctic mountainside

Once construction is completed, the entrance, which will shoot out of the mountainside, will be a narrow, triangular portal made of cement and steel, illuminated with artwork that changes according to the Arctic light.
by Staff Writers
Longyearbyen, Norway (AFP) Aug 30, 2007
Carved into the permafrost of a remote Arctic mountain, a "doomsday vault" housing samples of the world's most important seeds is taking shape to provide mankind with a Noah's Ark of food in the event of a global catastrophe.

At the end of a narrow gravel road in Norway's Arctic archipelago of Svalbard where, ironically, no crops grow, construction workers are toiling away on the top-security seed vault with six months to go before it opens.

An enormous freezer measuring 5,200 cubic meters (6,800 cubic yards), the vault will preserve some 4.5 million batches of seeds from all known varieties of the planet's food crops.

The hope is the vault will make it possible to re-establish crops obliterated by major disasters.

"It's a cheap insurance policy," says Cary Fowler, executive director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, the project's mastermind.

At its current stage, the vault looks like a deep, trident-shaped tunnel bored into the sandstone and limestone. Workers drilled around the clock to finish the tunnel, taking advantage of the Arctic's midnight sun.

The 120-meter (400-foot) dark passageway leads to three spacious cold chambers lit up by floodlights.

Once construction is completed, the entrance, which will shoot out of the mountainside, will be a narrow, triangular portal made of cement and steel, illuminated with artwork that changes according to the Arctic light.

Behind the airlock door, the three airtight chambers will feature row after row of metal shelves, on which will be stacked boxes containing the seed samples collected from hundreds of existing, more vulnerable, seed banks around the world.

"It doesn't take an asteroid hitting the Earth ... to endanger the biodiversity. Technical failures, bad management, typhoons or wars all contribute" to the threat, Fowler said.

Already, some of the world's biodiversity "has become extinct like a Tyrannosaurus Rex," he said, citing the destruction of seed banks in Iraq and Afghanistan due to wars and another one in the Philippines due to a typhoon.

Protected by high walls and fortified concrete, an armoured door, a sensory alarm and the native polar bears that roam the region, the "doomsday vault" is being built 130 meters (425 feet) above current sea level -- high enough that it would not flood if the Greenland and Antarctica ice sheets melt entirely due to global warming.

The seeds of wheat, maize, oat and other crops will be stored at a constant temperature of 18 degrees C below zero (0.4 degrees F below zero). In these conditions, sorghum seeds can be preserved for more than 19,000 years.

And even if the refrigeration system fails, the temperature will remain colder than 3.5 degrees Celsius below zero (25.7 degrees Fahrenheit) thanks to the permafrost.

The Norwegian archipelago, which is politically stable and distant from any seismic activity, was selected for its remote location "away from natural disasters, wars, civil strife and a lot of the kind of craziness that goes on in the world today," Fowler said.

The seed samples will remain the property of their country of origin. They will be sent to the vault in small, airtight packages, with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Norwegian government providing financial assistance to help poor countries do so.

The foundation and Oslo have donated almost 40 million dollars to the Global Crop Diversity Trust, an organisation sponsored by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation and financed by both public and private funds.

"We are trying to catch the diversity not between different species but within different species," Fowler said.

"If there is not enough genetic diversity the species will become extinct," he added.

There are currently some 120,000 types of rice in the world, some of which can grow under six meters (20 feet) of water while others thrive in semi-arid conditions.

"One can be as different from the other, as a dachshund from a Great Dane," Fowler said.

This genetic diversity, which makes it possible to choose the right species at the right time in the right place, could be the key to solving some of the planet's biggest challenges, such as climate change, water scarcity and energy conservation.

"No one knows today the potential benefit of these seeds -- the commercial value in crops or whether the genes can be used for medicines," Norway's International Development Aid Minister Erik Solheim said.

"There is also a moral issue to preserve an essential part of our cultural heritage for future generations," he added.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Researchers Clone Aluminum-Tolerance Gene In Sorghum, Boost For Crop Yields In Developing World
Washington DC (SPX) Aug 30, 2007
When soils are too acidic, aluminum that is locked up in clay minerals dissolves into the soil as toxic, electrically charged particles called ions, making it hard for most plants to grow. In fact, aluminum toxicity in acidic soils limits crop production in as much as half the world's arable land, mostly in developing countries in Africa, Asia and South America.







  • NASA's Troubled Future
  • NASA debunks claims of drunken space flights
  • Science Teachers Take Flight In Zero-Gravity
  • NASA's Centennial Challenges To Advance Technologies

  • Rovers Begin New Observations On Changing Martian Atmosphere
  • Threatening Conditions For Rovers In Giant Martian Dust Storm
  • HiRISE Confirms Existence of 'Pit Craters' On Mars
  • Calculating The Biomass Of Martian Soil

  • E'Prime Aerospace Corporation Selects First Launch Operations Facility
  • Sea Launch Awaits Delivery Of New Gas Deflector
  • India To Launch INSAT-4CR From Sriharikota On Sept 01
  • Ariane 5 - Third Dual-Payload Launch Of 2007

  • European Hot Spots And Fires Identified From Space
  • China Develops Beidou Satellite Monitoring System
  • DigitalGlobe Announces Launch Date For WorldView-1
  • Radar reveals vast medieval Cambodian city: study

  • Outbound To The Outerplanets At 7 AU
  • Charon: An Ice Machine In The Ultimate Deep Freeze
  • New Horizons Slips Into Electronic Slumber
  • Nap Before You Sleep For Your Cruise Into The Abyss Of Outer Sol

  • Neutron Stars Warp Space-Time
  • Water Vapor Seen 'Raining Down' On Young Star System
  • Shrinking Giants, Exploding Dwarves
  • XMM-Newton And Suzaku Help Pioneer Method For Probing Exotic Matter

  • An Exploding Lunar Eclipse
  • SpaceDev To Build Lunar Lander Prototype
  • Drawing A Living On Lunar
  • SMART-1 Diagnoses Wrinkles And Excess Weight On The Moon

  • Boeing Bids On Next Generation Global Positioning Satellite System
  • Lockheed Martin Bids On Next Generation Global Positioning Satellite System
  • Russia Starts Serial Production Of New Navigation Systems
  • Tracking The Elusive Shipping Container Out Beyond The Horizon

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement