Before I get started, I found a better labeled map that shows all 
the sites we visited in both our field seasons to give you a better idea
 of the places we visited. I'll be talking about our trip to a few of 
the smaller open spots in the northern Convoy Range in my next email, 
this email will focus on our trip up the Wright Valley where we were 
dropped on a helicopter day trip in the areas just east of the 
Labyrinth, around Lake Vanda and Prospect Mesa. Yesterday's email 
focused on the area between Lake Vida and Victoria Upper glacier, though
 the other two groups (as we were split into 3 groups of two) moved from
 Bull Pass to Lake Vida and the lower part of Victoria Valley near the 
Sand Dune Field. 
I
 was asked a few questions, though I'll just talk about one of them in 
this email. Though it doesn't look like it, the Dry Valleys are actually
 an ecologically active area, when I describe Marshall Valley I'll focus
 on the living things in these desolate and tough conditions. I was 
asked about precious minerals as well, and the answer is: there are 
none. At least no gold. There some strange rocks though, such a Kenyite,
 a mix of basalt and big anorthosite feldspar crystals that only form in
 certain divergent tectonic plate boundaries, so two places: Kenya in 
the Great Rift Valley, and Ross Island, but the Ross Ice sheet actively 
transported many basalts and kenyites from Ross Island and Brown 
Peninsula into some of the Dry Valleys, including Taylor, and the Royal 
Society Valleys, including Salmo, Garwood, Marshall and Miers Valleys.
Upper Wright Valley: Human Expeditions, Katabatic Winds, and Seal Traps
I
 was asked if there was much human history and impacts that can be seen 
in the Valleys. Turns out, if you pay attention, you can usually find 
signs of just about every time someone has ventured into the valleys. 
Last year we found seal mummies with their heads clearly chopped off 
with knives by Scott's crew (1910-1912) near Mummy Pond in Taylor 
Valley, a known site of the first expedition into the valleys. The 
valleys were essentially un-visited for another 30 years due to lack of 
funding and the world wars. Later on, as the US Navy and the NSF was 
scoping a spot for McMurdo Station in the late 1950s, the valleys were 
revisited and several sites were considered, including Marble Point 
along the coast (See map, I'll be talking about Marble Point in more 
detail in a later email). Though McMurdo was eventually placed on Ross 
Island, relics of old expeditions can be seen. As the Navy was exploring
 the valleys, they laid down survival caches and "dunny" (New Zealand 
speak for the bathroom) spots in various places. As we're looking for 
bones, we'll sometimes find toilet paper that is the roughly the same 
color from the 1950s until 1978 when the Antarctic Conservation Act designated the Dry Valleys as an Antarctic Specially Managed Area (ASPA). 
 
 
 
Left - A view of the Middle of Wright Valley. The Onyx River, the largest river in Antarctica,
 flows away from Lake Brownworth to Lake Vanda due to tectonic uplift 
creating a skewed topographical gradient resulting in a reversed flow 
direction; inland instead of to the ocean. Right - Tracks from a New 
Zealand tractor driven to Lake Vanda Station along the Onyx from the 
late 1950s. For a short period Lake Vanda station was staffed year round
 by New Zealand. Today Vanda Station remains staffed during the summer. 
Notice that the tracks look brand new despite being over 50 years old. 
Getting back to our research mission, we found that 
seals are generally distributed fairly evenly throughout the Valleys, 
except for several specific types of areas: bottlenecks, generally edges
 of glaciers that they have trouble climbing up and over or cliffs and 
closed off areas, such as the area directly beneath the Labyrinth. 
Left-
 Cliffs where Wright Valley thins out just below the Labyrinth. We found
 over 10 seal carcasses and scattered bones in this area. Right - 
Looking down toward the middle of Wright Valley. Many of the boulders in
 here would appear to be tough for seals to maneuver, yet they trudged 
not only through here but a few have sighted up and over the edge into 
the Labyrinth. 
 
 
Left
 - traveling down valley from the cliffs, we found we needed to climb 
over a Rock Glacier, often found only on Mars. Rock glaciers are a 
roughly 50-50 mix of rock and ice that flow very slowly and are formed 
when snow patches and glacial ice becomes buried under sediments. We 
found several seal carcasses on the rock glacier, many of them fairly 
early in stage of decomposition. Right - The "naptime while waiting for a
 helicopter pickup" photo with Lake Vanda in the background and the 
famous "bunny boots" in the foreground. However, katabatic winds were 
blowing pretty strongly to the point where we weren't certain of a 
pickup. Luckily the winds didn't prevent the helicopter from reaching us
 at the end of the day.
Winds are a major component of the environment in 
the Dry Valleys. Typically there are two sources of wind, cold constant 
and moist winds from the coast that blow in from the Ross Sea at around 
5-20 knots and warm, dry and strong katabatic winds that blow in from 
the continent at anywhere from 5-30 knots, with gusts higher than 60 at 
times. For reference, the "shovel test," in which the winds can keep a 
shovel from falling over, occurs at around 40 knots. For those in 
Southern California, you may recognize katabatic winds as the Santa 
Anas. Katabatic winds are essentially gravity driven currents of strong 
winds that blow from high areas to low and expand as they descend, 
becoming drier and even stronger. During the winter katabatic winds here
 will blow as strongly as 200 mph, which often send seal carcasses 
flying and generally sandblast mummies. 
We experienced a 3 day katabatic windstorm, which 
started when we noticed the constant daily coastal wind stopped for 
about 15 minutes, then the wind direction began to pick up in the 
opposite direction. Unlike the coastal winds which would typically stop 
during the the night, the katabatic winds blew throughout the night, 
reaching a crescendo on the third day when the winds were reaching a 
constant 20-30 knots. At that point we had to give up on seal sampling, 
which was getting difficult anyway just because we had to put rocks on 
our notebooks and sample bags to keep them from blowing away, and go 
make sure our tents were tied down securely so they wouldn't blow over. 
Luckily our yellow Scott tents can withstand extreme winds up to 250 
mph. 
In a storm on the ice sheet a few years ago, the 
members of a research team needed to huddle in a single Scott tent since
 the winds had torn apart and destroyed the other tents. When they left 
the tent by the time the storm had dissipated, a snowmobile had been 
blown away. According to Brenda, our 25 season veteran, she had been in a
 katabatic wind storm where they could hardly breathe inside because the
 tent was flapping so much. As a result, they couldn't light a match for
 the stove since the wind was too strong even inside the tent and had to
 resort to drinking juice packs for three days while huddled in their 
sleeping bags. Luckily the wind was never that fierce for us. While 
walking across the rock glacier photographed above, however, we were 
experiencing coastal winds when out of nowhere a katabatic wind blast 
nearly knocked us to the ground, and after that strong winds made us 
worry about our helicopter not being able to get us. Curiously, our 
other teammates farther down valley on the other side of Lake Vanda were
 still experiencing coastal winds, which made for some confusion as the 
helicopter pilots were feeling strong katabatic winds at altitude. 
That's a lot more than I was expecting to talk about
 winds. I'll try to get some pictures of wind blown seals to show you 
all in the next email. Still to come: The Convoy Range with Carcass/Bone
 weathering, Marshall Valley and wildlife in the inland valleys, Cape 
Roberts and wildlife on the Ross Sea Coast, Glacial reaction to Climate 
Change in Salmon Valley, Marble Point/Gneiss Point and the Antarctic
 Conservation Act, all of these with fun seal mummy action, and perhaps a
 conclusion with the future of the project and some penguins back at 
McMurdo Station.
As always feel free to ask questions and I'll try to cover them later on.