Rothera Air Facility | |
Iata: | QAR |
Icao: | EGAR |
Type: | Private |
Owner: | British Antarctic Survey |
City-Served: | Rothera Research Station |
Location: | Antarctic Peninsula |
Coordinates: | -67.5677°N -68.1277°W |
Pushpin Map: | Antarctica |
Pushpin Relief: | yes |
Pushpin Mapsize: | 250 |
Pushpin Label: | EGAR |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of Rothera Air Facility in Antarctica |
Metric-Rwy: | yes |
R1-Number: | 18/36 |
R1-Length-M: | 900 |
R1-Surface: | Crushed rock |
Footnotes: | GCM Google Maps[1] |
Rothera Research Station is the BAS logistics centre for the Antarctic and home of well-equipped biological laboratories and facilities for a wide range of research. The station is situated on a rock and raised beach promontory at the southern extremity of Wormald Ice Piedmont, south-eastern Adelaide Island.
The station has a crushed rock runway, with an associated hangar and bulk fuel storage facility, and a wharf for the discharge of cargo from supply ships. There is a transitory summer population of scientists and support staff who reach Rothera either by ship or through use of a de Havilland Canada Dash 7 aircraft flying from the Falkland Islands.
From its inception until the 1991/1992 summer season BAS Twin Otter aircraft used the skiway above the station on Wormald Ice Piedmont. With the commissioning of the gravel runway and hangar in 1991/1992 air operations became more reliable and access to Rothera was greatly improved through a direct airlink from the Falkland Islands. The Twin Otters mainly fly south of Rothera, via a network of fuel depots, most of which are staffed. Heading south of Rothera, the first stop would be Fossil Bluff, then Sky Blu.
The Dash 7 will make approximately 20 flights a season to Stanley during the summer, bringing in scientists, support staff, food and equipment. When not tasked for these flights, the Dash can fly to Sky Blu in one hop, landing on the Blue Ice runway, significantly enhancing the range of the Twin Otters by depositing fuel and equipment in much larger quantities.[2]