Hey all,
My apologies for not posting the last couple of days but we all were too busy finishing our research. The last couple of days were a lot of fun but also fairly sad. For our last day of research we went to a new site, Wise Point which turned out to be a bit of a let down because it was almost entirely artificially constructed and therefore could lead to no good coring. Instead we took modern transect and leveled into the nearest benchmark in an old underground very bizarre bunker. We also took geochemical and foraminifera samples the latter for Chris and the subsequent for Candace. At which point most of our group returned to Brownsville marsh while the fraction of us went to take a pollutant sample from the very tip of the Eastern Virginian coast. This attempt proved futile because someone had built a mansion on the marsh there and posted no trespassing signs everywhere. We decided to leave without our sample. When we got back, to the house, equipment washing of monumental proportions was undertaken and all the corers, both Vladmirs and Demetri were thoroughly scrubbed and all the Jeans le measureas were measured out to their full 30 m and cleaned. We tied off all the other sampling that needed to be done and added the Rose Bengal to our forams. Our whole group watched our last episode of tribe this one on the Dessanech people in the southern most tip of the Momo valley in Ethiopia.
Yesterday we had “a bit of a lie in” as Simon says and were up cleaning by 9:00AM. We finally discovered that we had an espresso/cappuccino maker, which became an indispensable tool in our final hours for some. We packed up and cleaned the house and cars from top to bottom. In keeping with time-old tradition the car, washing was half water fight half work but that seems to be the point. We were thoroughly finished by 1:00PM and did not need to leave until 4:00PM so we swam and skim-boarded with various degrees of success. After washing up, we headed out to the movies, Wall-E or Get Smart depending on your preference. Before the theatre, we stopped for dinner at the California Pizza in Norfolk, which seems to boast some of the more bizarre pizza combinations on this side of the Atlantic we made short order of a good eight pizzas and were off to the movies.
After getting home everyone spent the rest of the evening out on the porch going over the experience and talking about what expectations we had had and how those were fulfilled and exceeded. The last of us chipped in late at night and for the last time resided in our Italian villa.
Thank you to our leaders, Candace, Simon, Chris, Andrea, and Kate. The opportunity that you gave to us will be remembered by all. You are an inspiring presence and we greatly appreciate your dedication and poise. Thank you to EarthWatch for providing the context for this trip and deciding that young students are a priority for your organization. Thank you to the Durfee foundation without your funding this opportunity would not have been possible. Thank you to the University of Pennsylvania for taking on this project. Thank you the owners of our house for having the audacity to rent their house to a group of scientists and teenagers. Lastly thank you to all the parks and areas that we visited in our trip and to the various organizations that gave us permission to do our work.
Thank you
-The EarthWatch Virginia 2008 SCAP Team
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Today we had a representative of our sponsor organization visit us named Daniel. We are sponsored by the Durfee Foundation, which was started by the fellow who invented the Avery label. We showed him how to take cores and explained the research we are doing. We hit basal peat today! We even got a full 50 cm in one core! This left most of us ecstatic, which possibly attests to having been the marsh too long. The temperatures are rising in the low 90s today and the middle to high 90s tomorrow with no wind that gets harsh.
After finishing at Magothy, we went to the US Fish and Wildlife Service to ascertain our permit for tomorrow. The man that works there was the picture of a park ranger in his baggy slacks. He had the look of a man who has spent too long immersed in marsh muck. The site looks idealist, as far as marshes go, with many little streams and some beautiful marsh grass.
Simon gave his sea level talk tonight and elucidated and elaborated upon our previous knowledge greatly. Sea level rise and fall is now a much more complicated scenario. Some of the funnier tactics used in the presentation were a head and a soccer ball to illustrate the earth and sun. We returned to the food lion to complete a record reconnaissance mission for all our food except that we forgot the butter and Simon and Candace had to make a quick second run. We are all beginning to dread the end of our trip and that feeling is starting to hang in the air.
Cheers,
-The Team
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Good day all,
We returned to the infamous “death marsh” today, named as such due to the deep deep muck that it is comprised of. We leveled into the official benchmark near by left from 1942 and then leveled out all the stations. On the way, back we nearly lost Cat to the mud when she began to sink in but readily recovered herself and on we went in the name of research. We also broke a record for this group’s longest leveling measure, 560 meters a real accomplishment. While one group was hitting record leveling levels the other was finding record amounts of foraminifera under the scope. Sky found 23 alone.
Before returning from death marsh, Simon and Giles practiced their “blue-steel” look. Hey are now ready for New York’s finest run ways. Another condition along with “marsh madness” has appeared; “foram frenzy” has set in amongst some of our group after sitting for three straight hours today looking for the little buggers.
Tomorrow a fellow from our sponsor group will be joining us in the field to get a taste of the research. We are enthusiastic to share our acquired knowledge with him and to keep him safe from the ominous marsh cat.
Cheers,
The Team
Monday, June 23, 2008
Hey,
We just played the best practical joke yet this trip. Sky fell asleep during Tribe and did not arise until everyone else was leaving, at which point we told him that it was five in the morning (really ten thirty) and he bought in under the guise that we were to do an early day to avoid the heat. The gullibility factor involved had to be off the charts. We all got a good laugh out of that.
Today we returned to Oyster Bay probably for the last time and took core samples that will be carbon dated based on the peat. We also took a set for Chris to analyze back in England. We also leveled it all into a real USGS (United States Geological Survey) benchmark left from the University of Virginia. This required a team to walk a good three miles down the road to an abandoned house that looked like it could be left over from days of shoot outs and a slow pace of life. We found another spanner in the marsh, a plus due to our low supply. Sky and Giles boasted a core of 250 cm in some hard sand.
This afternoon was the all-scholastic beach-soccer game. One team emerged victorious with a margin of two yet all the players showed their true colors with a killer goal keeping strategy from Kathleen.
The eminent Andrea gave her lecture on tsunamis and earthquakes, and the consensus is that she does some really cool research. We were enlightened on the finer points of subduction and fault lines. It was also very interesting to hear how her research is done with similar techniques, at times, to the ones that we are using. Besides, that some of the combinations of data that she uses are inconceivable and we were blow away with the connections that her research requires.
Core well and good night.
The Team
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Cheers,
This morning we were planning on traveling to Mockhorn GATR marsh, Named after the rare semi-fantastical “Mock Horn gator” that is only rivaled by the ferocious “marsh cat.” Unfortunately Mock horn Marsh was unreachable and we ended up having to back out a good half mile. Our caravan finally found its home at the Brownsville Marsh, an interesting site that was revamped in the 40s. It had previously been used for pasture until the Second World War at which point the levee between the sea and the pasture fell into disrepair and the marsh took over.
We ran the usual transects and cores although the cores turned out to be fairly difficult as the youth of the marsh made the top very sandy and hard to core. The cuisine continues to change. The marshes that we visit have become to be graved of their salicornia, a small stalk like salty marsh plant. Sky has led the front in this regard and downs more of the stuff than the rest of us put together; we are surprised this green in such quantities has not made him sick. We went crab hunting in the bay on our return under the wary eye of our lifeguard. Alas no crabs today. Taylor and I constructed a dragon out of the debris left on the beach; he is named Cranach and is majestically keeping watch from his bed in the sand.
We had a lovely bean, rice and vegetable dinner made by Kate. Biscuits were also made to the enthusiasm of all. Our cooking has become an opportunity for kitchen dancing and fun. We seem to be on the cusp of a storm that has been blowing in. we said our good byes to Taylor today as she returned to Richmond in her dashingly retro white Volvo sedan.
Ciao,
The Team
P.S. it turns out that snails are in tune with the sound AUM and when hummed to come out of their shells.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Good day all,
Today we returned to the field! We went back to Magothy Bay to improve on our past visit. We took cores to determine the stratigraphy and decide where the best sample could be taken. Interestingly we hit peat in a small strip running south to north through the marsh, which can tell us where sea level was dating back into days far gone by. We also retook the tidal elevation as our last measures had large gaps. The day was hot and we got a bit of a late start so mud fights and painting abounded as well as some friendly rivalry between coring teams looking for peat.
Our late exit this morning was partially due to the arrival of Taylor, an EarthWatch SCAP participant from last year. Her sense of humor and rapport with Candace and Simon has thrown her into the group with ease. It has been fun to hear more about last year’s team and the work that they did. Taylor will stay with us until tomorrow afternoon. Our group has really started to fall into step as we all get to know each other more and continue to work together. This has led to more joking around while cementing a stronger community.
After departing to the sage advice of “top-cat,” some questionable fellow who wondered by this morning, our intrepid leaders continued to lead with poise. Simon has begun to share more of his vast music collection while Candace continues to lead as the hardest hardcore corer. We got muddy today and were desperately in need of a hose down upon return.
We had a wonderful Thai creation for dinner and complemented this dish with a geographically opposite drink, Horchata, a choice rice drink from Central America. Our group has become devoted to international soccer and today’s Russia Netherlands game was no disappointment. Tonight we sampled one of America’s cinematographic classics “Zoolander” a wacky spoof of sorts on the fashion industry. By tomorrow we will all have our blue steel down to a T.
Simon, Taylor, and I took a trip to the Food Lion today. Yet, upon our return it seemed as though we had never gone as most of the groceries were consumed within minutes, I guess that is what fieldwork does to you.
Cheers,
The Team
Friday, June 20, 2008

Hello all,
Today was our day off. We traveled to Virginia Beach and took a day off from our research. We were planning to go surfing but it turned out that there were no waves so that plan was abandoned for swimming. We said goodbye to Chris, with regret and wishes. The shops in Virginia Beach are filled with some of the world’s wackiest t-shirts. Other bizarre gifts range from anything you could find in a chotsky shop to the tackiest of stores.
Lunch proved harder to find than one would imagine as it seems that Virginia beach has a siesta at about 1:00pm, we think that all the restaurant owners want to take a beach day every once in awhile. Finally after a long search past the California pizza whose dishes seemed to have been made n their name state and later shipped here we found Harpoon Larry’s Oyster Bar which turned out to have some killer seafood. Candace and Kate took advantage of large crab arms and crawfish.
Later we setup some fantastic rainbow beach umbrellas and read David Sedaris. Our adventures continued to the Virginia Beach aquarium, which is advertise on BOB FM (the local radio station) to make you dance. While the dancing was minimal, the marine life was interestingly and mostly local providing yet another opportunity to learn about the local ocean environments. Finally, we returned to another episode of Tribe, an awesome series on the world’s last remaining true tribes, in which Bruce Perry lives with the local people and immerses himself in their culture.
-The Team
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