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As the Antarctic Search for Meteorites program (ANSMET) of CWRU
begins its 26th annual trip onto the ice fields of Antarctica,
new support from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) has allowed ANSMET to create a new reconnaissance team
to augment the existing National Science Foundation (NSF) supported
team. These teams will search the blustery, frozen landscape for
pieces of Mars and other solar system bodies during six weeks
of exploration.

photos courtesy of
Ralph Harvey
Jamie Pierce (left) and John Schutt
with the largest find of the 2001-2002 expedition to the
Meteorite Hills Icefield.
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Support for CWRU's new ANSMET team and its 2002 field season
came from a three-year, $1.6 million grant from NASA. "NASA's
support of the ANSMET program allows this valuable planetary science
program to grow in new and promising ways," says Ralph Harvey,
CWRU planetary geologist and ANSMET director.
The new ANSMET team will travel light and be well-supported by
small aircraft, allowing them to explore many poorly known and
hard-to-reach sites in a single season while also recovering significant
numbers of new meteorites.
This year, the reconnaissance team will explore ice fields in
the region around the Pecora Escarpment, roughly 200 kilometers
from the U. S. Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station.
The larger NSF-supported team will focus on systematic recovery
of meteorite specimens from ice fields where high concentrations
have been previously discovered. This year they will search near
the Goodwin Nunataks and MacAlpine Hills, near the head of the
Beardmore Glacier in East Antarctica.
The prospect that enables the expedition scientists to brave
Antarctica's cold and windy conditions is the potential of collecting
specimens that originated from Mars or other exotic solar system
bodies, explains Harvey.
Of the more than 11,800 meteorites recovered by ANSMET over the
past quarter century, about 5 percent are unusual enough to be
of high scientific interest, and about one out of 1,000 is from
the moon or Mars.
The five Martian meteorites found by ANSMET have been central
to NASA's advancing efforts to explore Mars, says Harvey.
ALH77005, found in the Allan Hills region by ANSMET in 1977,
was the first Martian meteorite found in Antarctica and the seventh
specimen known worldwide. It generated enormous scientific interest
and brought this enigmatic group of specimens into the forefront
of planetary research. EETA79001, recovered two years later at
the Elephant Moraine ice field, provided the dramatic conclusive
link between these meteorites and Mars. LEW88516 was found in
1988 at the Lewis Cliff Ice Tongue and has been the focus of many
studies including research on the abundance of water on Mars.
ALH84001, found by ANSMET in 1984 near the Allan Hills, is perhaps
the most famous of all the Martian meteorites, and the focus of
intense debate concerning possible signs of ancient microbial
life on Mars. The last Martian meteorite found by ANSMET was QUE94201,
a uniquely young but primitive volcanic rock found in the Queen
Alexandra Range in 1994.
Curated by the Johnson Space Center and the Smithsonian Institution,
ANSMET samples are available to researchers around the world for
planetary geology research.
"As NASA prepares to embark upon a decade of intensified in situ
exploration of Mars and on the way to an era in which sample return
will be a key facet of our program, the collection of priceless
meteorite samples from Antarctica is a vital step," says James
Garvin, NASA lead scientist for Mars Exploration.
"By supporting a dual-sampling team approach this year, NASA
hopes to return a diversified set of meteorite samples and to
increase the possibility of discovering additional meteorites
from Mars," adds Garvin.
Participating in ANSMET's meteorite recovery efforts this year
are Carlton Allen, Dean Eppler and Catherine Coleman from NASA's
Johnson Space Center; Andy Caldwell, a high school teacher from
Douglas County High School in Castle Rock, Colo.; Daniel Glavin,
Max-Planck Institute for Chemistry in Mainz, Germany; Diane DiMassa,
University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth; Dante Lauretta, University
of Arizona; Scott Messenger, Washington University in St. Louis;
and Linda Welzenbach, Smithsonian Institution. Nancy Chabot of
CWRU's department of geological sciences is a veteran of two previous
ANSMET expeditions and will be the lead scientist for this year's
fieldwork, while James Pierce of Colorado and John Schutt of Washington
State will be the expedition mountaineers.
For information, contact Ralph Harvey at 216-368-0198 or by e-mail
at rph@po.cwru.edu. Further
information on ANSMET activities, including maps, images and daily
updates from the field can be found at the ANSMET Web site at
http://www.cwru.edu/affil/ansmet.
The ANSMET Web site also includes links to associated sites such
as Antarctic meteorite facilities at NASA's Johnson Space Center.
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