Book Passage Reading on TV
On December 7, Lucy Jane Bledsoe, Bill Fox, Kristan Hutchison, and Joe Mastroianni read (brilliantly) from Antarctica: Life on the Ice at Book Passage, the "Bay Area's Liveliest Bookstore." And it is a wonderful place, with a string of amazing readings and a terrific audience. The reading was filmed by ForaTV and you can watch it here.
The next day I swam outside (heated pool!) then visited with my high school friend Neil Wright (then known as Munch) and we relived the summer of 1979 spent climbing in Eldorado Canyon, Colorado. There were a few epics--Rosy Crucifixion--that we both remembered vividly. From time to time I still have nightmares about that climb... Neil practices acupuncture in Santa Cruz, is married and has two children he clearly adores.
On December 7, Lucy Jane Bledsoe, Bill Fox, Kristan Hutchison, and Joe Mastroianni read (brilliantly) from Antarctica: Life on the Ice at Book Passage, the "Bay Area's Liveliest Bookstore." And it is a wonderful place, with a string of amazing readings and a terrific audience. The reading was filmed by ForaTV and you can watch it here.
The next day I swam outside (heated pool!) then visited with my high school friend Neil Wright (then known as Munch) and we relived the summer of 1979 spent climbing in Eldorado Canyon, Colorado. There were a few epics--Rosy Crucifixion--that we both remembered vividly. From time to time I still have nightmares about that climb... Neil practices acupuncture in Santa Cruz, is married and has two children he clearly adores.
Saturday night I wandered back into Book Passage and one of my heroes, Helen Thayer, was presenting from her most recent book, Walking the Gobi: 1,600 Miles Across a Desert of Hope and Despair.
At age 63, Helen walked across the Gobi desert with her husband and two
camels (Tom and Jerry). I'm a few chapters into the book but it has
Helen's wonderful cheer and energy and determination. Remember, she's
the one who traveled solo to the North Pole with her dog when she was
50. I'm waiting to see what she does when she turns 70.
Don't Eat Chilean Sea Bass
Every Thursday and Sunday evenings in McMurdo there are lectures, mostly given by the scientists working on the ice. This follows a long tradition in polar travel and exploration. Scott and his men had weekly lectures as well. They knew that to survive, or even thrive, on the ice they needed to keep their minds active.
When I was in McMurdo, David Ainley ("A Letter from Cape Royds" in Antarctica: Life on the Ice) gave a fascinating lecture on the fragile Antarctic ecosystem. I came away with many ideas, a vast appreciation for our planet and the determination never again to eat Chilean Sea Bass (which I had eaten; it's delicious). During the virtual tour someone emailed in a question about whether it's ok to eat "sustainable" Chilean Sea Bass. My first thought was that it is not possible to have "sustainable" Sea Bass, since it is a fish that begins to breed only when it is twelve years old. For a more in-depth answer, I turned once again to David. Here is what he has to say:
Every Thursday and Sunday evenings in McMurdo there are lectures, mostly given by the scientists working on the ice. This follows a long tradition in polar travel and exploration. Scott and his men had weekly lectures as well. They knew that to survive, or even thrive, on the ice they needed to keep their minds active.
When I was in McMurdo, David Ainley ("A Letter from Cape Royds" in Antarctica: Life on the Ice) gave a fascinating lecture on the fragile Antarctic ecosystem. I came away with many ideas, a vast appreciation for our planet and the determination never again to eat Chilean Sea Bass (which I had eaten; it's delicious). During the virtual tour someone emailed in a question about whether it's ok to eat "sustainable" Chilean Sea Bass. My first thought was that it is not possible to have "sustainable" Sea Bass, since it is a fish that begins to breed only when it is twelve years old. For a more in-depth answer, I turned once again to David. Here is what he has to say:
"The basic deal is that Chilean Sea Bass (also known as Antarctic toothfish) are major players in the Ross Sea ecosystem: they eat a lot of what penguins eat, both Emperors and Adelies. They're also eaten by competitors of the penguins, the killer whales and Weddell seals. With and without the CSB there's competition for food, in this case the Antarctic silverfish. Hard to say how the imbalance will be struck once CSB are removed, but all the other marine ecosystems on Earth have been broken by similar depletions of big fish near the top of the pyramid (e.g., cod, salmon, swordfish, tuna etc).
There is no such thing as a 'sustainable' CSB. It's just not ecologically nor mathematically possible, when 50+ year old fish are being removed and they don't even begin to produce young until 12 and likely not in quantity until several years later. The management strategy of CCAMLR (Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources)is to reduce the Ross Sea CSB population by 50% in 35 years. That's not sustainable fish management but rather sustainable fishery biologist management, because none of these fishery managers will even be alive by then. The 'certification' that recently has been applied to CSB fishing (off South Georgia, and now a move afoot to certify the Ross Sea) by the Marine Seafood Council is only because not many birds are caught in the longlines. This has been a major problem for longline fisheries in lower latitudes, especially with albatross and giant petrels. However, it appears, owing to severely depressed populations at breeding colonies farther north (because of longline mortality), there no longer are any giant petrels or albatross that frequent the Ross Sea. Their numbers have contracted closer to the colonies. Thus, you could not catch one on a longline if you even tried, at least in the Ross Sea.
So, that's the story.
Don't eat one. Bad karma."
Antarctic Meteorites
One question we got for the virtual tour was this:
Where can I get genuine Antarctic meteorites? Is there anyone who ships them to the US?
As it turns out, Christopher Cokinos, one of the contributors to Antarctica: Life on the Ice has an essay in the collection about searching for meteorites on the polar plateau. The photo here shows researchers on snowmobiles, combing the ice for meteorites. One of them could be Chris. I post this photo so you can get a sense of how vast the landscape is, especially when you are looking for something as small as a meteorite (see the next photo).
Chris is the editor of one of my favorite journals, Isotope, which publishes literary essays focused on science and the natural world. Chris is just finishing a book on meteorites, titled, The Fallen Sky: A Private History of Shooting Stars, to be published by Tarcher/Penguin in the fall of 08 or Spring of 09--I'll keep you posted. Here, then is his response about buying Antarctic meteorites:
One question we got for the virtual tour was this:
Where can I get genuine Antarctic meteorites? Is there anyone who ships them to the US?
As it turns out, Christopher Cokinos, one of the contributors to Antarctica: Life on the Ice has an essay in the collection about searching for meteorites on the polar plateau. The photo here shows researchers on snowmobiles, combing the ice for meteorites. One of them could be Chris. I post this photo so you can get a sense of how vast the landscape is, especially when you are looking for something as small as a meteorite (see the next photo).
Chris is the editor of one of my favorite journals, Isotope, which publishes literary essays focused on science and the natural world. Chris is just finishing a book on meteorites, titled, The Fallen Sky: A Private History of Shooting Stars, to be published by Tarcher/Penguin in the fall of 08 or Spring of 09--I'll keep you posted. Here, then is his response about buying Antarctic meteorites:
(This is not a photo of Chris, but rather of Associate professor Dante Lauretta, from the University of Arizona--where I got my MFA--who was a member of the Antarctic Search for Meteorites program. Those meteorites are small, no?)
From Chris Cokinos, answering the question if you can buy Antarctic meteorites: The answer is essentially no. You can't buy the meteorites collected by
the U.S. government-sponsored teams. However, there are some Antarctic meteorites
in collections around the world that were not so gathered. Potentially,
one could see such a specimen for sale. I see some for sale every once in
awhile. The price could vary wildly, and I would be extremely wary of
so-called Antarctic meteorites for sale, unless they are being offered by
respected dealers. There's a group called the International Meteorite Collectors
Association, and though some very fine dealers may choose not to belong,
those that do are to uphold high standards of practice. But I'd reiterate
that the meteorites collected by ANSMET--the Antarctic Search for Meteorites--are
in the public domain. They go to the Johnson Space Center and to the Smithsonian
where they are described and made available for free for researchers around
the world. Members of ANSMET understand that theirs is a team activity and
that no meteorites--not even a tiny fleck of one--belong to us individually.
There are no tokens, no treasure hunts. In the course of my research, I
did come across allegations that in the past various people (pilots, others)
had "poached" meteorites; I won't name names and I didn't pursue the gossip,
but it seems reasonable enough. Also, there have been private meteorite-gathering
trips and "observing" trips; I wouldn't be surprised if some such specimens
might make it to the marketplace. But ANSMET's lead scientist, Ralph Harvey,
does a bang-up job of making sure the ANSMET members and all the support
personnel understand there are no souvenirs.
Because here's the real
treasure story: what these meteorites tell us about the solar system. ANSMET
is the only reliable source of extra-planetary materials going. Until sample
returns from the asteroid belt are commonplace, this will remain so. Just
today I read about a presentation concerning the famous ALH84001 meteorite--this
was the meteorite that a decade ago a scientific team said might contain
Martian microfossils. That meteorite, according to Science magazine, really
launched the whole field of astrobiology. In the meantime, the vast majority
of the scientific community has come to dismiss the claims of Martian microfossils.
But today another group of researchers has found evidence that this meteorite
contains the building blocks of life--various organic materials--though not
life itself. If this result holds up, it's huge. It would be the first
confirmation of an environment on Mars (very cold but volcanic) in which
life's building blocks formed.
After my trip to Antarctica I had a
chance to visit the curation facilities at JSC, where Kevin Righter's staff
showed me ALH84001. It's the perfect example of the ironies of meteorites.
If you didn't know any better, it would like like a chunk of worn driveway.
But knowing what it might contain and knowing it had been blown off Mars
to land on the polar plateau...well, that's pretty damn cool. And now it
might lead us to places on Mars where we could find life's remains--or maybe
living microbes.
Thanks Chris! for this marvelous explaintion.
Blog Talk Radio!
We did it! Katy Jensen called in from Colorado Springs, Guy Guthridge hopped off his boat long enough to phone in, and Karen Joyce and David Ainley called in from the Ice for the virtual book tour. My first ever. It was a fun experience and I could have talked all night with these four writers who contributed to Antarctica: Life on the Ice. We covered a lot of topics--climate change, sunrise at the South Pole, penguins and their lives and the fact that it's now 40 degrees in McMurdo (warmer than here in New York). You can listen to the interview by visiting my website. There were more questions than we could answer so I'll try and tackle a few here in the next few days. In the meantime, here's one response from my friend Sue Pierce, from Philadelphia:
We did it! Katy Jensen called in from Colorado Springs, Guy Guthridge hopped off his boat long enough to phone in, and Karen Joyce and David Ainley called in from the Ice for the virtual book tour. My first ever. It was a fun experience and I could have talked all night with these four writers who contributed to Antarctica: Life on the Ice. We covered a lot of topics--climate change, sunrise at the South Pole, penguins and their lives and the fact that it's now 40 degrees in McMurdo (warmer than here in New York). You can listen to the interview by visiting my website. There were more questions than we could answer so I'll try and tackle a few here in the next few days. In the meantime, here's one response from my friend Sue Pierce, from Philadelphia:
"The virtual book tour thing was really cool to listen to. . . it
helped me understand better why so many of the essays in your book
sound so heartbroken, why there are planes taking off from the Ice full
of people sobbing. It's kind of amazing, because when I got the book
and started reading it, the last thing I expected was stories filled
with heartsick longing for a place seemingly so inhospitable to humans.
And the funny stories were a surprise, too. Since I was raised on tales
of Scott of the Antarctic and later Shackleton, I figured Antarctica
was all about noble sacrifice and freezing digits off and eating sled
dogs."
Thanks for this, Sue! Any other comments are welcome!