KHQ.COM - NASA astronaut Stan Love is having a hard time right now. Not in space,
but on the forbidding East Antarctic Ice Sheet. Together with a group
of dedicated volunteers, Love is looking for meteorites — rocks from
space that have fallen to Earth. And it's not your usual vacation.
"Being on the Antarctic ice is very much like being in space," Love told SPACE.com in December over dinner at the American McMurdo Station
on the coast of the frozen continent. "Without proper protection, the
environment would kill you within a few hours, and there's little hope
of rescue if something goes terribly wrong."
Love has been in the astronaut corps for 14 years. In 2008, he paid a
two-week visit to the International Space Station on the space shuttle
mission STS-122. As a management astronaut, he is now involved with
so-called spaceflight analog programs: terrestrial experiments and
expeditions that pose similar challenges as a journey into space.
NASA's two main space analog programs are the underwater NEEMO (NASA
Extreme Environment Mission Operations) base off the Florida coast, and
DesertRATS (Research And Technology Studies) in the Arizona desert. "But
ANSMET
[Antarctic Search for Meteorites] is much more space-like than these
two," Love said. "If an emergency occurs in DesertRATS, you can be in a
hospital within three hours. In the case of ANSMET, it might well take
three days."
Meteorite hunters
ANSMET started back in 1976. The program is funded by NASA, the
National Science Foundation and the Smithsonian Institution, and is led
by geologist Ralph Harvey of Case Western Reserve University in
Cleveland, Ohio. Every austral summer, small volunteer teams head off to
a remote region of Antarctica to set up a simple, self-contained field
camp. For six weeks or so, they search the bluish ice for conspicuous
dark rocks that might be extraterrestrial in origin.
"Building a permanent station in such an isolated region is
unthinkable," Love said. "You can only go there with a minimum amount of
equipment." That includes two-person tents, food rations, warm
clothing, of course, and snowmobiles, on which the team members survey
the frozen surface much like police comb a forest when searching for a
lost child. [Hunting for Space Rocks: Q&A with Geoff Notkin of 'Meteorite Men']
Thanks to the effect of exposed or sub-glacial hills and mountains on
the slow motion of the ice sheet, meteorites that have fallen over the
past tens of thousands of years are concentrated and pushed up toward
the surface, where they're pretty easy to spot.
"I also joined the ANSMET team
in the 2004-2005 season," Love said. "My eyesight is still quite OK,
and I found lots of meteorites. Which, by the way, basically means I was
lucky." ANSMET doesn't officially keep track of who found what — all meteorite finds are considered to be the result of a team effort.
Famous finds
Probably the most famous ANSMET meteorite is ALH84001, which originated
on Mars and, in 1996, was thought to contain fossil evidence of
microbial life. Since then, studies have cast doubt on that
interpretation. But even run-of-the-mill meteorites (so-called ordinary
chondrites) have scientific value: they provide astronomers with a
window on the early history of our solar system. [Gallery: Meteorites From Mars]
But why would an astronaut go meteorite hunting? "First of all, I like
it here," Love said. "Eight years ago, it surprised me how much
Antarctica appeals to me."
But there's more. Love said his astronaut training and experience could
be useful for the ANSMET team. Just like the crew of a spaceship, the
meteorite hunters are a small group of interdependent people, working
for weeks on end in a very isolated environment, with all the social and
psychological challenges that might show up.
"I called Ralph [Harvey] and offered to come along for a second time
and share my experiences," Love said. "The timing was perfect: Ralph
had just been considering a suggestion by some isolation researchers to
provide his team members with some kind of teamwork/leadership
training."
Getting along well with each other is not just more enjoyable,
according to Love — it could be crucial to the success of the
expedition. "If the social environment gives you a lot of energy,
everything goes smoother. However, if it takes a lot of energy, everything is harder — you've got less energy left for your actual work, for risk awareness, etcetera."
Group dynamics
Moreover, years of training have convinced Love that, surprisingly enough, good chemistry between people is really trainable.
"Feeling comfortable with your tent companion is something that you can
actively gain. Of course, my family would laugh if I told them I plan
to teach this kind of stuff. They'd say I'm breaking the rules every
day."
During the second week of December, the ANSMET group left McMurdo for
an unexplored region at the head of the Beardmore Glacier, on the west
side of the Transantarctic Mountain Range. This time, the meteorite
hunters set up their camp in two or three different locations, while a
special reconnaissance team searched for new hunting grounds farther
south.
Of course, Love said, there are also many differences between ANSMET
and spaceflight. "With ANSMET, it's the extreme cold that permeates
every aspect of life. With spaceflight, it's the microgravity. But in
terms of team size, isolation, and resupply and rescue challenges, they
are very similar."
Another important difference is that every space mission is led and
guided by Mission Control down on Earth. "ANSMET is much more
autonomous," Love said. 'The decision makers are in the field, with the
crew. With future manned missions to Mars, we may need similar crew
autonomy. In that sense, NASA can also learn something from the
meteorite hunters."