Every experiment starts with a single station.

Every experiment starts with a single station, but ours started with three! We started this morning right on time, hitting the road at 8am and arriving at the hike in stop to our first site, MOJA, by about 10am. This site we did as a full team of four so I could instruct the students in station design and installation. They took to it quite well and were able to install another one as a team of two undergrads.

We had some fantastic desert wildlife company today. Leopard print lizards, hares, and desert rats were scurrying all over the washes we walked down. We did have some (solvable) logistical issues with getting to the sites and, in particular, some of the hikes with a full station worth of equipment on our backs gets pretty tough, but we'll tough it out and try to find the best hiking routes in to minimize the ups and downs.

Three down, 16 to go!

The  UT undergrads with the UT geology truck. From left: Ashlyn Zare, Jackie Rambo, and Daniel Ortega-Arroyo. Hook 'em horns!

Daniel and Jackie after breakfast, discussing the plans for the day.

Daniel at station MOJS, with the UT truck looking car commercial-esque.

UT undergrads checking on the status of station MOJA at the end of the install.

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