July 30, 2004
Mock Mars spacemen camp on Devon Island
Crews logs detail the
hardships of pretending to be in outer space
JANE
GEORGE
Devon
Island isn't Mars, but for members of the NASA Haughton-Mars Project, it's the
next best thing to being there. They can even tool around on their own Marsmobile:
a converted Humvee truck. (PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MARS PROJECT)
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Would you like to take a spin in the MARS-1 Humvee, short for "High Mobility
Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle" or HMMVV?
If you're a researcher with Mars on your mind, you might end up driving the
sturdy, 8,800-pound refurbished rover around the NASA Haughton-Mars Project
camp on Devon Island.
If plants interest you, then the project's Arthur C. Clarke greenhouse, named
after the science fiction writer and author of 2001: A Space Odyssey, may be
just what you were looking for.
Or would you prefer an EVA, that is some Extra-Vehicular Activity?
First, you'll have to put on a protective suit and oxygen tanks. Then, pretend
you're an astronaut on Mars and can't breathe the air outside, rather than on
Devon Island in Nunavut's backyard, just like seven wannabe space explorers
who are toughing it out by the edge of the Haughton Crater in the Flashline
Mars Arctic Research Station.
The "crew" of this Mars habitat, a group chosen from volunteers around
the world, is mid-way through a four-week "rotation" in the station.
The three-year old white fibreglass station, which looks like a giant can of
tuna, is temporary home to Jason Held, crew commander, Blajez Blazejowski, a
paleontologist from Poland, Ákos Kereszturi, an Hungarian geologist,
Judd Reed, a computer engineer, Shannon Rupert Roble, an ecologist, and two
journalists, Joan Roch and Louise Wynn.
In the past, visitors have been welcome to see Nunavut's Mars-on-Earth project
for themselves, but increased security measures are in place this year in response
to the global war on terrorism.
The Mars Society, an international group committed to the exploration and settlement
of Mars, funds the station, which sits at the edge of the 20 km-wide, 23-million-year-old
Haughton Crater. It's among those sites on Earth where environmental conditions,
biological characteristics and geologic features may be similar to Mars, although
Mars has far colder minimum temperatures, harsh radiation conditions, dust storms
and low atmospheric pressure.
Their crew's "logs" give a glimpse of mock-Mars life and are on-line
at: www. marssociety.org.
"I WANT you to know the difficulties of living with six others in a confined
space, or the length of time to put on a space suit, or... the joy of screaming
across a desert on an ATV on a mission of exploration. On a Mars mission, it
is vital for the people back home to feel the same passion for exploration as
the explorer," Commander Held says in one recent entry.
The entries range from the philosophical to the gritty, often written in a
stirring style that echoes the starship logs of Star Trek captains James Kirk
or Luc Picard.
July 20: "The crew is thinking of today more than other days, for today
is Space Day, the 35-year anniversary of the Apollo-11 landing and the first
true day of human exploration of another orbiting body. What we do here at FMARS
is nothing more than a continuation of that work - it is our intention that
the lessons we learn here are written down and used in the science of human
space exploration... and to me this is a perfect end to a good long day."
The crew has been there since July 9, arriving with 2,200 pounds of food, equipment,
an all-terrain vehicle and a trailer, shipped from Resolute Bay via a community
they call "Inukshuk" - apparently confused with "Iqaluit."
Inukshuk is a place, according to Held's entry, that is "completely devoid
of suburbs" where both children and adults offered him "polished art
stoneworks (for a price)."
By July 12, Held writes the "habitat, after several days of occupation,
has become muggy with sweat and steam from boiling the water. The moisture runs
down the walls like tears and the windows show raindrops on their inside."
Outside excursions are no picnic either. During an EVA, Held writes, "both
of us wore long wool socks to protect our feet, drank plenty of water, and stretched
before departing. We made sure the suit's pack, providing air and water, was
tight and as high on our backs as would fit. This is an interesting way to wear
it - very uncomfortable to drive in, but perfect for a bush-walk."
These space enthusiasts could comfort themselves with the words spoken by the
late U.S. president, John F. Kennedy, after the first successful manned space
flight, works which are often quoted by people at the Haughton-Mars camp on
Devon Island.
Kennedy said exploration and manned travel of space had to be done "not
because they are easy, but because they are hard."
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