Tucson Citizen.com

Can We Help Inspire The Next Generation Of Great American Scientists And Thinkers

by on Jul. 19, 2009, under Astronomy & Space Program, General Science, Meteorite Science, Technology

I do not have any children of my own, and the chances of me generating any are about the same as the human race developing a faster-than-light starship drive in my lifetime. That fact that I chose not to procreate doesn’t mean I don’t care about the younger generation.

Scale cube used by NASA when photographing moon rocks

Scale cube used by NASA when photographing moon rocks

When I was about six years old, a jolly and friendly geologist, built like a bull and named Wally Robbins, took me under his wing during one of our family vacations to the US. He gave me my first trilobite fossil (I went on to find some spectacular specimens in later life, but I still have that first little Elrathia kingii and still treasure it) and some lovely rocks and minerals. I watched him walk the beaches and rivers of New England at low tide, collecting rocks. His wife joked that the only exercise he ever got was when he bent down to pick up something of geological interest.

Were it not for Wally, I may never have followed my path into the world of scientific adventure and exploration. I remember how inspiring he was to me and—in my own small way—I try to pass it along.

The author teaching kids about space rocks at the LPL Apollo 11 event

The author teaching kids about space rocks at the LPL Apollo 11 event

Yesterday, I had the very great honor of participating in the Lunar and Planetary Lab‘s Apollo 11 40th Anniversary celebration. My staff and I set up a display of rare and unusual meteorites, as did several of our professional colleagues. I had the unexpected pleasure of meeting astronomer Thomas Bopp, co-discoverer of Comet Hale-Bopp “the most widely observed comet of the twentieth century.” I also got to spend time with John Terry White, an aerospace expert and president of White Eagle Aerospace, and a most charming and fascinating man. Scott Schneewels astounded me with his collection of genuine Apollo mission historic artifacts, including a control panel from an actual Lunar Module, hand-woven memory from one of the command modules, and tools designed to collect and transport moon rocks.

[R-L] Astronomer Thomas Bopp co-discoverer of Comet Hale-Bopp, Mr. Bopp senior, photographer Caroline Palmer with signed Hale-Bopp photos (geek!), the author

Pictured right to left at Tucson's Lunar and Planetary Lab: Thomas Bopp co-discoverer of Comet Hale-Bopp, Mr. Bopp senior, photographer Caroline Palmer with signed Hale-Bopp photo (geek!), the author

I was afraid that all of this “science stuff” might be a little dry for the scores of kids who were in attendance, and who were born more than thirty years after the Eagle touched down at Tranquility Base. There was no chance of that. We gave away small meteorites with identification cards, all day long, to wide-eyed children who were enthralled to hold something from outer space. And we distributed free DVDs, magazines, and postcards about meteorites and answered a million questions: “How does the Earth know there isn’t life on other planets?” (Well, that was a tough one)

Aerolite Meteorites display and meteorite hunting demo at the Flowing Wells High School science fair

Aerolite Meteorites display and meteorite hunting demo at the Flowing Wells High School science fair

If one of those kids decides to devote his or her life to aerospace, or meteoritics, or some other important scientific discipline, then we really are leaving something worthwhile behind. With budget cuts in research and education resulting in tragedies like the wonderful Flandrau Planetarium remaining closed for five days out of every seven, those of us who care about the future must take up the slack in other ways.

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Photographs by Leigh Anne DelRay, Callisto Images © Leigh Anne DelRay, all rights reserved.

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  • radmax

    Greetings, LL. It’s reassuring to see kids actually interested in science, with all the negative press about low science and math test scores. Wish I could have been there. BTW-saw you and your colleague in Kansas ‘chasing’ meteorites on the science channel. Did you have as much fun as it looked?

  • http://tucsoncitizen.com/lizard/ Logical Lizard

    Dear Radmax: Thank you for the feedback. Always greatly appreciated.
    It is so great to see kids fired up about science. And I was interested and puzzled by one phenomenon yesterday: Some of the kids would ask fairly vague questions, and when I tried to answer them, they’d stare off into space and interrupt with a new question before I’d completed the answer. It was as if they felt they were required to ask something, but didn’t really want to know the answer.
    Others were wide-eyed with wonder, and pointed in cabinets saying: “Please can we touch that meteorite!” Every now and then one youngster would just be, obviously, brilliant: articulate, thoughtful, fascinated, intent. We tried to spend a little extra time with those who are clearly going on to be something special in later life. Not favoritism or elitism, just maybe seeing a spark of interest that could grow into an intellectual fire when she/he is about 20 or 22. All I can say is that if someone had given me a meteorite when I was seven or eight, I would have been over the moon  : )
    And thank you for watching our new show Meteorite Men on the Science Channel. Yes, it was extreme fun and it was also grueling. We loved almost every minute of it, but filming twelve hours a day, five days back-to-back is very tiring. Sometimes it’s a little hard to be “on” after so much time on location. But we love our production company and hope to do more episodes.
    Thanks for reading; thanks for writing. Cheers to you — LL

  • isabel

    Great blog like always!  Those kids don’t know how lucky they are. : )  They even got their questions answered.
    Always remember Wally—and ‘always’ pass it along.                                            You Rock! : )


Logical Lizard illustration by Timothy Arbon
On location filming "Meteorite Men"

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