By DIRK LAMMERS Associated Press Writer
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. June 22, 2009 (AP)
The Associated Press
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Sanford Lab infrastructure technician Bill Heisinger uses a jackleg drill to drill holes in the...

Sanford Lab infrastructure technician Bill Heisinger uses a jackleg drill to drill holes in the shaft wall for the dedication plaque Monday, June 22, 2009, during a ceremony dedicating the Sanford Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory at the former Homestake Gold Mine in Lead, S. D. Looking on are, from the left, technician Alvin Burns; Ron Wheeler, executive director of the South Dakota Science and Technology Authority; businessman and philanthropist T. Denny Sanford, who has pledged $70 million to the project; and Dr. Ken Lande, a physicist at the University of Pennsylvania who worked for decades on a solar neutrino detector that had been installed at the 4,850-foot level of the former mine. Lande was one of the first to suggest converting Homestake in a national underground laboratory. (AP Photo/Steve McEnroe)

(AP)
Far below the Black Hills of South Dakota, crews are building the world's deepest underground science lab at a depth equivalent to more than six Empire State buildings — a place uniquely suited to scientists' quest for mysterious particles known as dark matter.
Scientists, politicians and other officials gathered Monday for a groundbreaking of sorts at a lab 4,850 foot below the surface of an old gold mine that was once the site of Nobel Prize-winning physics research.
The site is ideal for experiments because its location is largely shielded from cosmic rays that could interfere with efforts to prove the existence of dark matter, which is thought to make up nearly a quarter of the mass of the universe.
The deepest reaches of the mine plunge to 8,000 feet below the surface. Some early geology and hydrology experiments are already under way at 4,850 feet. Researchers also hope to build two deeper labs that are still awaiting funding from Congress.
"The fact that we're going to be in the Davis Cavern just tickles us pink," said Tom Shutt of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, referring to a portion of the mine named after scientist Ray Davis Jr., who used it in the 1960s to demonstrate the existence of particles called solar neutrinos.
Davis and a colleague named John Bahcall won a share of the 2002 Nobel Prize for physics for their work.
The old Homestake Gold Mine in a community called Lead (pronounced LEED) was shut down in 2001 after 125 years. Pumps that kept the mine dry were turned off years ago, so workers have been drying it out to prepare for the new research.
Before the labs are built, crews must also stabilize the tunnels and install new infrastructure. The lab at 4,850 feet is not much to look at yet. A rusty orange film covers the walls, floors, ceilings and debris left behind by miners.
The first dark matter experiment will be the Large Underground Xenon detector experiment — or LUX — a project to detect weakly interacting particles that could give scientists greater insight into the Big Bang explosion believed to have formed the universe.