- Sky Blu
Sky Blu is a forward operating station for the
British Antarctic Survey (BAS) onEastern Ellsworth Land inAntarctica , located at 74° 51' S, 71° 34' W. It is in an area ofBlue Ice (extremely hard and dense ice which has lost the air bubbles that normally cloud the ice). It provides a runway able to accommodate wheeled aircraft that are larger than can be handled by other types of runways in the area. The facility is used to store fuel drums and field equipment for onward transport by the Twin Otter aircraft. The camp is staffed by a minimum of 2, but usually 3, people including a mechanic. Staff eat and sleep in a Melon hut, but there is also a garage and other tents.History
It was first located by BAS in 1993-94 and rapidly became an essential tool in BAS's ability to operate further south. This is mainly because the Blue Ice runway is able to accommodate wheeled aircraft. BAS can therefore fly its
Dash-7 4-engined plane fromRothera directly to Sky Blu. The Dash has a much higher load carrying capability than theTwin Otter s used by BAS previously.Sky Blu became fully operational in the 1997-98 field season, and has had an increase in use by BAS ever since. The old field camp at
Ski Hi Nunatacks was abandoned soon after, with the weather station finally being removed in November 2004.Description
The blue ice runway is groomed by the camp staff using commercial lightweight snow ploughs and blowers (which could be shipped in by Dash 7 aircraft). When the wind is favourable, and the conditions good, a runway 1.2 km in length and 50m wide is possible. However, operations are often hampered by much lighter winds causing knee high snow drifts which reduce contrast.The runway is marked by flags and large colourful bin bags to improve contrast for approaching planes.
External links
* [http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/living_and_working/research_stations/skyblu/ BAS Sky Blu Web Page]
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