|
Space Topics: Planetary AnalogsThe Antarctic Search for Meteorites2008-2009 Field Expedition Blogs
Meteorites fall on Earth every day, but most are never found because they land in the ocean or in an environment where they are difficult to spot against the background noise of other rocks. Antarctica is one of the best places in the world to hunt for meteorites, because they are easy to spot against the bright ice and because some of the glacial processes that prevail in Antarctica actually concentrate meteorites, exposing thousands of years' worth of meteorite falls at the surface of the glacial ice. Since 1976, the Antarctic Search for Meteorites (ANSMET) project has conducted yearly expeditions to the Antarctic to find these meteorites and send them back to laboratories across Earth for study. During the 2008-2009 season, the seven-member expedition team is posting daily blog entries via an Iridium satellite phone, which they have given permission to The Planetary Society to repost here. Who's Going, and Where We Are Going Expedition Blogs |
||||