Times Colonist

Ontario researcher joins Antarctica meteorite hunt

- PETER GOFFIN

An Ontario physicist is embarking on a NASA-funded expedition to Antarctica to collect meteorites, in hopes that the fallen space rocks will give researcher­s new insight into the outer reaches of the solar system.

Scott VanBommel, a postdoctor­al fellow at the University of Guelph, is joining the annual Antarctic Search for Meteorites for a six-week excursion to the Transantar­ctic Mountains, about 350 kilometres from the South Pole.

It will mean sleeping in a twoperson tent in one of the least hospitable environmen­ts on Earth, but VanBommel said it’s a chance to give back to the scientific community.

“I’m just really happy to go and be a part of this important work,” the 30-year-old said hours before his Friday departure.

“We can learn a lot by studying these fragments of space rocks that potentiall­y are in their native form, from when the solar system formed. They provide us little windows into the past, to study and potentiall­y learn more.”

Antarctica’s empty, ice-covered expanse makes the continent ideal for spotting space debris.

“Meteorites fall pretty uniformly all over the world, but what makes Antarctica special is that you have this white backdrop, so you have these dark meteorites and this light background,” VanBommel said. “It makes them much easier to find than, say, around here where you have weathering and erosion and dirt.”

Antarctica is also home to giant ice sheets which, over thousands of years, gradually shift toward the edges of the continent. When the ice sheets run up against mountain ranges or other natural barriers, old ice deep below the surface gets forced up, bringing deposits of old meteorites with it.

Led by Ralph Harvey, a planetary materials professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, the expedition team will split into two groups of four people.

One group will continue the ongoing systemic search of an area visited in previous missions.

The second group, which includes VanBommel, will conduct “spot-to-spot” reconnaiss­ance, looking for new sites.

“It’ll be exciting,” VanBommel said. “We’re covering a lot of ground this year.”

The Norwich, Ont., native is one of a handful of volunteers selected from a pool of 100 researcher­s who apply each year to participat­e in the trip.

As one of the rookie members of the team, VanBommel went through a three-day boot camp at Case Western to prepare him for the trip.

“We went over all the details of what we’ll be doing, the type of equipment we’ll have, safety stuff. It was very thorough three days,” he said.

Since 1976, the Antarctic Search for Meteorites has brought back over 21,000 meteorite specimens.

The samples they recover are shipped to a laboratory at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. Samples of the meteorites are also sent to the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n. Researcher­s from anywhere in the world can examine the meteorite samples, upon request.

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH ?? Canadian physicist Scott VanBommel is heading to Antarctica on a NASA-funded expedition to collect meteorites in what experts say is one of the best environmen­ts for finding space debris.
UNIVERSITY OF GUELPH Canadian physicist Scott VanBommel is heading to Antarctica on a NASA-funded expedition to collect meteorites in what experts say is one of the best environmen­ts for finding space debris.

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