We consider the capabilities of current and future large facilities operating
at 2\,mm to 3\,mm wavelength to detect and image the [CII] 158\,μm line
from galaxies into the cosmic "dark ages" (z∼10 to 20). The [CII] line
may prove to be a powerful tool in determining spectroscopic redshifts, and
galaxy dynamics, for the first galaxies. We emphasize that the nature, and even
existence, of such extreme redshift galaxies, remains at the frontier of open
questions in galaxy formation. In 40\,hr, ALMA has the sensitivity to detect
the integrated [CII] line emission from a moderate metallicity, active
star-forming galaxy [ZA=0.2Z⊙; star formation rate (SFR) =
5\,M⊙\,yr−1], at z=10 at a significance of 6σ. The
next-generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) will detect the integrated [CII] line
emission from a Milky-Way like star formation rate galaxy (ZA=0.2Z⊙, SFR = 1\,M⊙\,yr−1), at z=15 at a significance
of 6σ. Imaging simulations show that the ngVLA can determine rotation
dynamics for active star-forming galaxies at z∼15, if they exist. Based
on our very limited knowledge of the extreme redshift Universe, we calculate
the count rate in blind, volumetric surveys for [CII] emission at z∼10
to 20. The detection rates in blind surveys will be slow (of order unity per
40\,hr pointing). However, the observations are well suited to commensal
searches. We compare [CII] with the [OIII] 88μm line, and other ancillary
information in high z galaxies that would aid these studies.Comment: 11pages, 8 figures, Accepted for the Astrophysical Journa