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South Dakota chosen for underground lab
Defunct Homestake Gold Mine site for federal project
By Mary Clare Jalonick, Associated Press Writer - 07/11/2007
WASHINGTON The National Science Foundation on Tuesday chose South Dakota’s closed Homestake Gold Mine as the site for a new underground physics lab to study the history and makeup of the universe.
South Dakota won the project, called the Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory, over three other states Colorado, Minnesota and Washington. The NSF said the lab, located at Lead, S.D., in the northern Black Hills, will be the largest and deepest facility of its kind in the world.
The research team developing the project is expected to receive up to $5 million a year for three years to continue planning for the lab. Construction is scheduled to start in fiscal year 2010, depending on funding from Congress.
The lab would conduct research in physics, astrophysics, earth science and geomicrobiology, studying particles from the sun, the formation of minerals and hydrology inside the Earth and microbial life deep underground.
Physicists want to go deep underground to conduct experiments to increase their understanding of the universe’s composition, its beginning and its future. More than a mile of rock would filter out many of the cosmic rays.
The reason for going underground is the same reason why astronomers look at stars at night,’’ said Ken Lande, a University of Pennsylvania physicist who manages a small existing underground lab at Homestake.
Scientists also want to study dark matter, which has gravitational force but is not visible. Other experiments would study whether protons decay, which the NSF has said would provide evidence that all the fundamental forces are united at some very high energy.
South Dakota touted Homestake’s depth, its existing miles of tunnels and shafts, and immediate availability as reasons to put the lab there. Mining stopped at Homestake seven years ago.
Homestake and a mine in Colorado were chosen in 2005 as finalists for the lab. The NSF reopened the competition in 2006 after the University of Washington complained that its proposal was unfairly eliminated. The foundation later accepted proposals from Washington and Minnesota.
The Colorado and South Dakota teams already have received $500,000 each to prepare a conceptual design.
In addition to the scientific research expected out of the lab, South Dakota stands to gain about $300 million in federal funding and the potential for millions of dollars more in scientific grants to the participating universities.
No official cost estimates or staffing levels have been mentioned yet.
Associated Press Writer Carson Walker contributed to this report from Sioux Falls, S.D.
On the Net: Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory: http://www.dusel.org
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