Thursday, June 30, 2011

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Latitude:-31.27211
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GPS location Date/Time:06/30/2011 15:57:41 CST

Message:Hey all,

Here's our new location. We hope things are well!

Cheers,
Jon and Christine

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Greetings from Day 13, or something like that

Hello again from Leigh Creek!

I'm afraid I'm in another rush unfortunately, so here's another quick bullet summary of what has happened this week!
  • got lost in the meandering stream system of Warraweena after dark (deemed the "Death March", perhaps will elaborate with next week's update)
  • measured 5 more stratigraphic sections at not-so-fantastic outcrop
  • victimized by an attack from a rogue mouse (see this post by Jon!)
  • stumbled across an emu's nest!
I've written a post about my encounter with ants and the mysterious mystery that was solved early in the field season.  Also, lots more photos. I hope this gives you guys enough to read until then. Cheers mate!

Christine

The outback is out to get me: part 1

(The alternative title for this post was 'Survival: Outback' but I'm pretty sure CBS actually did film a season out here, now that I think about it.)


A few weeks before Australia, I decided that it would be a wise idea to familiarize myself with the wild dangers of the outback. This mostly consisted of me watching YouTube videos of fire ants taking down megafauna and orb weavers devouring small birds.

So I wasn't particularly well-informed, but I knew that 1) Australia no longer has any natural predators and 2) it would be winter, and thus most scary things like the taipan snake would be inactive.

I felt pretty safe, and decided not to dwell on the potentially life-threatening stuff (read: ignorance is bliss). This was relatively easy to do, with the amazing scenery and back-breaking work to distract me. The wee little carbonates, the cute kangaroos, the adorable parrots—this place was totally harmless.


The mysterious clopping noise

The events portrayed in this post occurred on June 18 and 19.
 

The superstitious have always said that strange things happen during the full moon, but I have only just recently considered that perhaps there is a seed of truth to this belief.

The moon was full on our last night in Owiendana, and it was under its blessing that I endeavored to capture the most beautiful night sky I have ever seen.  Jon had turned in early for the night, leaving me to my own devices—quite literally.  With a bed of hot coals crackling at my feet, I stood in the cold waiting for the faint click of my Canon G11 to tell me it had finished shooting.

I was happy with most of the photographs shot; the sky was so clear that even the bright moon could not wash out the dimmest of stars. I was actually thankful for the subtle moonlight, the way it cast a silvery glow on an otherwise dark landscape.  In retrospect however, I should have been more wary of it; little did I know that the moon was a harbinger of the mysterious and unusual happenings about to begin, as superstition would have it.

It was while I was flicking through the photos on my camera when I first heard it.

Guest post from Jon: Marvolo the Mouse

For the first time, after four visits to Australia, I was physically assaulted by a wildlife denizen. At our first camp (Third Pine Creek on Owiendana station), we were warned of the presence of mice. Sure enough, that night, we observed little food searchers, scurrying around our cook table, looking for dinner. Precautions were taken -- food boxes sealed, dishes well cleaned, the offending rodents run off, the truck shut for the night. But our truck is old; there are many points of ingress and egress for a little mouse.

Sure enough, when we moved camp, there were not two passengers, but at least four. Evidence of their nightly feasts were diurnally found -- nibbled pastas, sampled nuts, brown sugar grazed upon, an abundance of mouse crap at the base of our food boxes. We sympathized with the feelings of satisfied hunger our unwanted guests must have felt, but these raids represented an existential threat. Thinking we faced only one foe, we named him/her Marvolo. We raised the threat level from yellow to red, and bought plastic boxes the first time we passed through Leigh Creek, our resupply town. The nighttime food raids ended, with our vulnerable edible sundries ensconced in plastic forts. The mice appeared frustrated. One behind in the arms race, they vented their rage by shitting all over our canned goods, which were left out in the open to weather the storm. They decided to take it to the next level.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

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GPS location Date/Time:06/28/2011 16:18:35 CST

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Here's our new location. We hope things are well!

Cheers,
Jon and Christine

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Thursday, June 23, 2011

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GPS location Date/Time:06/23/2011 19:24:11 CST

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Here's our new location. We hope things are well!

Cheers,
Jon and Christine

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Day 7 Update

Hello friends!

I'm currently sitting at a computer in the elementary school library of this tiny little town called Leigh Creek. Jon and I are stopping here for a few hours to restock on some important food items (like Tim-Tams and onions) and take care of other necessities before we leave for Warraweena, where we will be camping for one week.

So much has happened in these past seven days, but unfortunately, with my slow Internet access, I will have to tell you about most of the events later.  I've uploaded a few photos, but I will need to upload more in order to do these stories justice.  But anyhoo, here's a bulleted summary of what's been going on:
  • measured three stratigraphic sections (see post)
  • learned to drive a stick-shift truck just in case Jon collapsed from overheating of the brain
  • saw 45 kangaroos, 16 emus, 2 foxes, and way too many goats and sheep
  • solved a spectacularly non-scientific mystery (next week)
  • found a mouse chilling out in our supply of rice and pasta
  • fell victim to an anthill and basically all of its occupants (next week)
  • nearly died at the sight of the night sky and all of its blindingly wonderful sparkliness
  • relapsed into pyromania, hell bent on the path of becoming an arsonist (and a really good one)
  • mapped a paleocanyon using really expensive equipment, only to lose a day's worth of work to a software crash ("Damn Trimble!")
Again, sorry for the lack of updates.  Next weekend, I'll have better access to the nets and definitely more stories (and photographs) to share!

So long,

Christine

Measuring a stratigraphic section

Note: It may be helpful to read the Project Summary before reading this post.

Within every stack of sedimentary carbonate rock lies a record of the evolving environment and climate of the Earth, locked up in isotopic signatures that are only deciphered after analysis in the lab. To fully interpret these signals, we must first understand the physical settings in which the carbonates were deposited. This kind of information can only be uncovered through fieldwork, and measuring stratigraphic sections is one important way of determining the sedimentary succession of different rock types and observing subtle clues left behind by the environment.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

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GPS location Date/Time:06/21/2011 20:17:19 CST

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Cheers,
Jon and Christine

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Sunday, June 19, 2011

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GPS location Date/Time:06/19/2011 19:25:09 CST

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Cheers,
Jon and Christine

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Thursday, June 16, 2011

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Cheers,
Jon and Christine

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Blog updates

So the truck is fully loaded and ready to go.  We're finally heading north!  Good-bye Adelaide, good-bye civilization—hello Flinders and the absolute middle of nowhere. 

Sadly, the absolute middle of nowhere means I'll only be in touch with you once every week.

But have no fear!  Luckily, the department has provided us with a snazzy, Princeton-looking SPOT Satellite GPS Messenger.  It's orange and black and the size of my palm, but the coolest thing about it is that it can relay our location via e-mail to this blog (see this post).  And better yet—you can follow our movements within the past week on our SPOT shared page! 

So expect updates on our location via SPOT every 2 to 3 days, or whenever we change camp.  If you don't see anything for a while, you can safely assume that I'm located somewhere within the bowels of some large, previously unknown carnivore from the outback.   

Heaps good. (That's the equivalent of 'wicked' in Aussie.)  Wish me luck!

Monkey wrenches and close calls

So, we've run into a bunch of minor setbacks recently that have delayed our course to the outback by two days.  To start:

I guess bad luck first struck when we arrived at Brisbane in the airport.   Jon was marked for death the instant the airport security dog jumped up onto his backpack.  He was flagged for both drugs and explosives ("Are you sure your research doesn't involving mining with explosives?"), so the customs officials had to search through all of his bags.  Obviously, they didn't find anything (though they were quite interested in the scatterings of dirt that fell out of Jon's backpack after fifteen rigorous shakes), but the whole ordeal had taken a while and now we only had thirty minutes to transfer to the domestic terminal and catch our flight to Adelaide.  Luckily, with our sprightliness and perhaps one guiltily cut line, we made it just as the attendants were making the final boarding call—phew.

It was noon when we arrived in Adelaide, and we immediately set out to complete our errands of 1) buying foodstuffs to feed us for the next 2 to 3 weeks, 2) grabbing camping gear from a nearby friend's place, and 3) picking up 'the Beast' from the repair shop.  By this time tomorrow, we would be driving up to the northern Flinders Ranges to begin the field season—if everything went according to plan.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

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Guyot1
Latitude:-34.93498
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GPS location Date/Time:06/15/2011 17:19:45 CST
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A travel haiku—
Stuck in Adelaide
Handling our broken truck
Head north tomorrow
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Monday, June 13, 2011

G'day mate!

Greetings from Oz.  Thanks for visiting the blog!  Jon and I have finally made it to Adelaide, and we are both suffering from some pretty intense jet lag (in fact, Jon has totally passed out and his "nap" is quickly becoming three cycles of uninterrupted REM sleep).  Somehow, we managed to pull off quite a productive day running errands after our morning arrival despite our zombified state—but more on that later!  My eyes are getting droopy, and while a string of loosely connected, semi-coherent ramblings might be entertaining, it's more likely to be disastrous.

In the meanwhile, feel free to browse around the page link tabs above for more information about why I'm in Australia and what I'll be doing here.  Comments are much appreciated.  Hooroo ('good-bye' in Australian lingo, apparently)!