... the North Pole is ours!

It's quite an audacious land grab. For the 21st century that is. Then
again, maybe not.
_________________
An expedition aimed at strengthening Russia's claim to much of the oil
and gas wealth beneath the Arctic Ocean reached the North Pole on
Wednesday, and preparations immediately began for two mini-submarines
to drop a capsule containing a Russian flag to the sea floor.

The Rossiya icebreaker had plowed a path to the pole through an
unbroken sheet of multiyear ice, clearing the way for the Akademik
Fedorov research ship to follow, said Sergei Balyasnikov, a spokesman
for the Arctic and Antarctic research institute that prepared the
expedition.

"For the first time in history people will go down to the sea bed
under the North Pole," Balyasnikov told The Associated Press. "It's
like putting a flag on the moon."

Russian scientists hope to dive in two mini-submarines beneath the
pole to a depth of more than 13,200 feet, and drop a metal capsule
containing the Russian flag on the sea bed. Video Watch the factors
fueling the arctic oil race ยป

Balyasnikov said the dive was expected to start Thursday morning and
last for several hours.

The voyage, led by noted polar explorer and Russian legislator Artur
Chilingarov, has some scientific goals, including the study of Arctic
plants and animals. But its chief goal appears to be advancing
Russia's political and economic influence by strengthening its legal
claims to the gas and oil deposits thought to lie beneath the Arctic
sea floor.

The symbolic gesture, along with geologic data being gathered by
expedition scientists, is intended to prop up Moscow's claims to more
than 460,000 square miles of the Arctic shelf -- which by some
estimates may contain 10 billion tons of oil and gas deposits.

The expedition reflects an intense rivalry between Russia, the United
States, Canada and other nations whose shores face the northern polar
ocean for the Arctic's icebound riches.

About 100 scientists aboard the Akademik Fyodorov are looking for
evidence that the Lomonosov Ridge -- a 1,240-mile underwater mountain
range that crosses the polar region -- is a geologic extension of
Russia, and therefore can be claimed by it under the U.N. Convention
on the Law of the Sea.

The subs will collect specimens of Arctic plants and animals and
videotape the dives.

The biggest challenge, scientists say, will be for the mini-sub crews
to return to their original point of departure to avoid being trapped
under a thick ice crust.

"They have all the necessary navigation equipment to ensure safety,"
Balyasnikov said.
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Denmark hopes to prove that the Lomonosov Ridge is an extension of the
Danish territory of Greenland, not Russia. Canada, meanwhile, plans to
spend $7 billion to build and operate up to eight Arctic patrol ships
in a bid to help protect its sovereignty.

The U.S. Congress is considering an $8.7 billion budget
reauthorization bill for the U.S. Coast Guard that includes $72.96
million to operate and maintain the nation's three existing polar
icebreakers. The bill also authorizes the Coast Guard to construct two
new vessels.

http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/07/30/russia.northpole.reut/index.html?iref=newssearch

http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/08/01/arctic.grab.ap/index.html

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