ANSMET Meteorite Recovery Expedition 2001
On November 24, 2001, a group of the world's leading researchers, with the support of the National Science Foundation and NASA, will begin a two-month expedition to the frozen desert of Antarctica in search of clues to the origins of the solar system
While Waiting for a Plane
Two California natives
1/21/2002, Near where the Twin Otter will land

Antarctic meteorite hunters, once finished with their field season, endulge in a variety of diversions and sports in an all-out effort to wait, wait, wait in good spirits for the first of many plane rides home.

Besides French Cricket, DVD movies, crossword puzzles, books, packing personal gear, and meals:

Matt constructed a sailboard using a banana sled, bamboo poles for a mast, and skidoo canvas-cover for a sail. Cari and Maggie took it for a few rides also. It seemed to go pretty fast actually. Then the winds went away for the next few days. Which of course is great! Except if you want to go sailing on the blue ice. Funny thing, that weather and what you have to hope for one day as compared to the next.

On a beautiful, windless day, a group went for a hike to Score Ridge to enjoy the expansive view from the top. No skidoo bumps, exhaust, or noise to bother us!

Duck went for a walk to another nearby ridge and brought back pieces of fossilized sandstone from the rock formation underlying the Ferrar Dolerite.

Nancy went for a walk and found a meteorite! Hooray! That makes our total count 333 for the season.

Matt, Nancy, and Linda built a snow castle. It probably looks more stable than it actually is. John came by and offered the comment of "well, this is truly boredom." But really, for those of us who didn't grow up with snow, it was quite fun!

We are on the flight schedule for, hopefully, two afternoon flights tomorrow. So, perhaps this time tomorrow, we'll be in McMurdo!

If not, talk of the ANSMET games has been floating around, including three legged races and sleeping bag hopping...

Almost Ready
Maggie
1/20/2002, Meteorite Hills

No Otter yesterday and no Otter today. Maybe tomorrow and maybe the day after tomorrow.

Yesterday we started to break down camp. The emergency survival gear, the ice axes and most of the ice chippers, the broken skidoo parts, the flags, and the meteorite kits are all packed. The meteorites and the chocolate bars for the JSC meteorite folks are all in their shipping cases. The skidoo tanks are almost empty and the skidoos are all sitting in a row where the Otters like to park.

Matt built a wind surfer out of a sled, a skidoo cover, and some flag poles. It skims along the ice at a nice clip in even a light wind. We got up to roughly 10 mph with two of us aboard.

Here are some phrases that I've picked up in the last six weeks.

Antarctic Salute: A one-mitten gesture of contempt used in place of the one-finger gesture of contempt.

Clean Underwear: Underwear that has been worn for less than ten days.

Crowd: A group of more than eight people.

Equalizer: A girl's best friend or her worst enemy.

Feast: A meal that requires more than one pot to prepare.

Health Food: A meal that contains less than a stick of butter or any vegetables whatsoever.

Lunch Break: An interval, usually around noon and lasting no more than ten minutes, in which you huddle downwind of a rock, a skidoo, or a friend and cram chocolate bars and slim jims into your mouth.

McMurdo: A magical place that has showers and toilets.

Micrometeorites: The dirt at the bottom of the water pot.

Nice Weather: Any weather condition in which the wind speed is less than 40 mph.

Safe Ground: An ice field or a snow field in which the width of the crevasses is less than the width of the skidoos.

Slim Jim: A unit of currency worth about a US dollar.

Wildlife: The skua bird that flew by a few weeks ago.

-Mags

More Q&A's
Nancy
1/19/2002, Meteorite Hills


So, we spent the afternoon packing up our camp a bit. We might have a plane come as early as tomorrow to begin taking us and our supplies (and our meteorites!!) back to McMurdo. However, we are just an alternate for tomorrow's scheduled flights, in case one of the primary flights can't fly because of something like bad weather at the field site. We are a primary flight on the schedule for Tues. afternoon (Jan.22). But as we've all come to know well over the last few weeks, you never can tell what the weather might bring. So, we'll just have to wait and see how it all works out...

Meanwhile, meteorites were inventoried and stored. Extra food was consolidated and packed. Snowmobile survival packs were organized and stacked. Flags were retied and bunched. Broken snowmobile parts were boxed. Snow was shoveled. And numerous other little tasks, that really went pretty quickly with 8 of us. We now have a nice pile of supplies waiting for a plane. All our tents are still up of course, including, amazingly, that determined little poo tent which continues to hang on by strings...

So, with this relatively easy day, I wanted to answer a few more of the questions we've received. We have really enjoyed getting comments and sharing our expedition through this website.

Is it interesting researching meteorites in Antarctica? What is the most difficult part of your job?

Well, I personally feel extremely lucky to be here. Antarctica is amazing and every time you round a corner you are reminded of that. I also think researching meteorites anywhere, not just in Antarctica, is interesting. Some of these are rocks that date back to the beginning of the solar system, 4.5 billion years ago. Some of these are rocks that came from deep inside asteroids large enough to have a core and mantle like the Earth. Some of these are rocks from lava flows on the Moon or Mars. To me, it doesn't get much more interesting than that!

As far as difficult, we have been out here at our Meteorite Hills camp for over 6 weeks. That is quite a bit of time. And I think though we've enjoyed our stay very much, we are all also looking forward to getting back to our family and friends.

What type of materials have been collected? I'm interested to know the composition of the materials.

Most of the meteorites we have found this season will probably be classified as ordinary chondrites. But don't let that ordinary fool you! These materials are some of our most primitive samples, dating back to when our solar system was just forming. They have, in general, a similar concentration of elements as the Sun. These meteorites may represent the building blocks out of which planets such as our Earth were formed.

However, you should keep in mind that it is difficult to positively identify the type of meteorite in the field. More detailed analysis is needed in a lab to do that. Along with the ordinary chondrites, we did find many other meteorite types. Some were guessed to be from melting on a large asteroid. Others are probably composed of iron and nickel and may represent the central core of an asteroid. But really, we have to wait for the meteorites to be properly examined in a lab before we'll really know what we've found this season. That proces will begin in late March, when the meteorites will arrive at NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Do you get to keep a small meteorite as a souvenir of your adventure?

No. Absolutely all meteorite samples are collected and made available to the scientific community. Even small, seemingly common meteorites can tell us quite a bit about our solar system. And really, we all have plenty of photos and memories as souvenirs.

What a great post about MN, sad to say it arrived on a day when the temps are expected to reach 45F. True Minnesotans are really envious of your weather as WE HAVE NO SNOW and it hasn't gone below 0 once yet this winter.

Hmmm. Well, true Minnesotans may be envious, though I won't pretend to possibly understand that. Personally, I'm very much looking forward to some warmer weather and not having to wear 3 layers of clothing all the time. But then, I don't live in Minnesota...

And now, some questions and answers from Linda:

Is it night when we have day?

We are on the same time as Christchurch, New Zealand (where the International Antarctic Center is and where we were all issued our Extreme Cold Weather Clothing.) We are 3 hours earlier, but one day later than California. I really like the 24 hours of sunlight here!

Do you see any animals?

We are far enough inland that we do not see animals or birds here. A skua (kind of like a seagull) would be the only bird that would come around here. They are scavengers. When we get back to McMurdo Station, we might be able to see penguins and seals along the coast.

How do you eat?

We cook with a lot of butter and eat just about anything you find in a freezer case: scallops, shrimp, steak, chicken, mixed vegetables, potatoes. Sometimes we fix pasta, soup, stirfry, quesadillas. Dinner is fixed on two Optimus camp stoves in the vented tents (which also provides the heat.) Lunch is quick foods: mixed nuts, dried fruit, beef jerky (lots of it), chocolate bars (lots of them), and granola bars.

The Skidoo Rebellion
Matthew Genge
1/18/2002, Meteorite Hills

Today was to be our penultimate day in the field, however, in the Antarctic things can change quickly and thanks to the Great Skidoo Rebellion we probably will not be venturing far tommorrow. It began innocently enough with a few clangs and clatters as we trundled our way out into the field along the Sastrugi Road. Within an hour, however, we had eleven broken sets of boggie wheels on our snow mobiles. Despite regularly tightening bolts and constantly monitoring our mounts for flipped wheels the 700+ miles of smashing over the ice and concrete-like sastrugi have finally exacted their toll. The same constant juddering that has shattered the steel axels of the boggie wheels has also left our bones and muscles feeling bruised and torn, and in the last week at least has made it increasingly painful to get out of our sleeping bags in the morning.

Snow machines with broken boggies are about as useful as a white pony in the Antarctic (not one of Scott's best ideas). The problem we faced today is that we had only one spare set of boggie wheels and fixing the skidoos has involved some imagination. The critical wheels are the front and back ones and so we spent well over an hour undoing bolts and swapping wheels with bare hands in the freezing wind. The repairs, however, did good and at least got us all back to camp. By the end of the day we still have a full complement of snow machines. However, most of these could only be driven safely by my mother (p.s. glad you're out of hospital mum!).

Today was actually a difficult day for other reasons than the skidoo rebellion. There's a strange conflict of emotions at the end of a season with people torn between the magnificence of their present and the familiarity of their future. We've been in the field now for 6 weeks, living in tents in which water left in a cup will freeze, where washing is almost an impossibility and warmth is as fleeting as the cold numbness that is a familiar friend. We all are looking forward to the small luxuries of life such as showers and indoor toilets. I will definitely be spending several hours in a warm cubicle in McMurdo with a newspaper (the Guardian) and a big smile. There are of course other things we are looking forward to. All of us have people we care about and miss that we have not seen for what seems like forever and we all hope to see them soon. All of us are wondering whether the life we left will be the life we return to. The answer will in this case be yes, in truth it will only ourselves that has changed, almost impreceptibly, but slightly changed as it is.

Despite the yearning for home there's something here that makes it bitter to leave. This is such a majestic desolation. Today I stole a few minutes concentration from the hunt to look around me and set to memory all that I could see and feel about being in the most remote of all places on Earth on a summers day in the year 2002 with my new friends eagerly scouring the ground around me. When ever I want I will be able to close my eyes and I'll be able to feel the razor bite of the breeze blowing down the ice slopes. Even if I never am able to return to this continent again I will still see the glimmering of the Sun reflected on the blue ice, contorted almost like a stormy sea that has been frozen in the instant that it enveloped the nunataks. It was said by a far wiser man than me "Bitter sweet feelings, heck, you can even enjoy those if you try". Thanks Ralph, that will have to be my epitaph.

 

 
Who: Ralph Harvey, John Schutt, Jamie Pierce, Nancy Chabot, Maggie Taylor, Cari Corrigan, Linda Martel, Juanita Ryan, Duck, Matt Genge
Where: CWRU
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