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Techniques for Contamination Assessment During Drilling for Terrestrial Subsurface Sediments
Authors:Jens Kallmeyer  Kai Mangelsdorf  Barry Cragg  Brian Horsfield
Institution:1. NASA Astrobiology Institute, University of Rhode Island , Narragansett , Rhode Island , usa;2. GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam , Telegrafenberg , Potsdam , Germany;3. Department of Earth, Ocean, and Planetary Sciences , Cardiff University , United Kingdom
Abstract:

Details about the procedures for drilling a ca. 150 m long drill core in a terrestrial setting under contamination controlled conditions are presented. Different to previous studies we only used commercially available drilling equipment to reduce the cost of operation significantly. The goals were (1) to minimize, (2) to monitor and, if possible, to quantify the contamination of the recovered sediments, and (3) to identify the different sources of contamination. Both the potential contamination of the sample material by surface microorganisms and non-indigenous material was assessed. To estimate the infiltration of drill mud into the core, fluorescent microspheres, having about half the size as microorganisms, were added to the mud. The drilling technique used was mud rotary drilling. With the exception of the very beginning of the drilling operations, the drill mud was devoid of any allochthonous hydrocarbons potentially derived from the drilling equipment or drill additives, and its biomarker composition reflected the varying organo-facies that were penetrated. Due to the lack of allochthonous hydrocarbons in the drill mud, its infiltration into the sediment cannot be traced by organic geochemical biomarker analysis. Microspheres proved to be a sensitive tool for the assessment of infiltration of drill mud into the core. The concentration of microspheres in the drill mud decreased continuously during the drilling, most probably caused by seepage of mud through leaks and attachment of spheres to the surface scum in the mud pit. Microscopic enumeration of the microspheres showed great variability in the depth of penetration of mud into the core, apparently unaffected of lithology. The sampling of the core material in the laboratory was carried out inside an anaerobic chamber. Several techniques for subsampling were used, according to sediment properties. The overall results indicate that, if strict contamination control protocols are employed, it is possible to recover uncontaminated samples at reasonable cost with commercially available drilling equipment.
Keywords:contamination assessment  terrestrial drilling  rotary drilling  deep biosphere  biomarkers  microspheres
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