Welcome
to Dinosaur Expedition 2000, Project Exploration's
window onto Paul Sereno's four month dinosaur
expedition to the Sahara Desert.
Between August 13 and December 5,
when you log on to www.projectexploration.org,
you will have direct access to discoveries as
they happen and to the team of the 2000 Expedition
to Niger.
Dinosaur Expedition 2000
is the window on to the 2000 Expedition to Niger
led by Paul Sereno. Developed
by Project Exploration as part of its mission
to make science accessible to the public - and
especially kids - "DE2K" allows visitors
to witness not only paleontology in action, explore
questions about dinosaur evolution, and learn
about the challenges of a four-month expedition
to the world's largest desert. Along the way,
visitors will also explore Niger and get to know
some of the people who live there.
The expedition has an ambitious
itinerary that will take them criss-crossing northern
Niger with time in September to see the Cure Salee,
a nomadic festival during which the Wodaabe (Fulani),
men dance in lines and the most beautiful of the
tribal women deem which of the men are the most
handsome.
There are four camps planned. Camp
One will be based in 110-million-year-old beds
near the site of a bizarre, 600-toothed plant
eater the team discovered and partially excavated
in 1997. The three other camps planned will allow
them to explore 130-million year-old and 90 million
year-old dinosaur beds.
Part of the agreement with the
country of Niger includes a mandate create a survey
of sites found in the areas explored. In addition,
any fossils that are collected will be loaned
to the team to bring to Chicago clean and prepare,
but eventually the fossils will be returned to
Niger and placed in the National Museum in Niamey.
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How it Works
Locating a high tech computer operation
in the middle of the Sahara poses challenges of
its own. The computers need to survive 130 degree
heat, there are there no sockets to plug into
and the team will be working in one of the dustiest
environments on the planet. "The only thing worse
would be to have live dinosaurs tramping through
our equipment tent daily," remarked Lyon.
The website will be created out
of a special lightweight "clean" "spike tent"
with power for the computers drawn from batteries
recharged daily by a gas generator. The team will
use solar energy to recharge batteries for digital
cameras. The team will photograph and write during
the day and work at night on special ruggedized
personal computers. The computers will be connected
to a satellite phone that can transmit information
to the states at 65 kilobites a minute - faster
that most people's home systems.

Click here for
a full view of the drawing
The information travels 23,000 miles
up over the equator and then comes back down another
23,000 miles. The trip, nearly 50,000 miles, results
in a one-second delay.
The team has brought as much extra
equipment as they could afford. If something unfixable
happens (for example, both computers stop working)
the team will read updates over the phone and
they will be transcribed. With assistance from
Paul and the rest of the expedition team, DE2K
is kept online by four people:
- Erik Vecchione is Project Exploration's
webmaster. He works with PE to design the
page and program the features. While the expedition
is in the field, Erik is responsible for sending
the team email questions from the States and
posting the team's outgoing images, updates,
interviews. He is also overhauling the existing
Project Exploration website.
- Conor Irons coordinates the work
with partner schools, assists with developing
site content and is developing an evaluation
of the Dinosaur Expedition 2000 efforts with
schools.
- DE2K's field team consists of Mike
Hettwer and Gabrielle
Lyon. In addition to their responsibilities
of prospecting countless miles in search of
fossils, cutting burlap strips and moving
tons of rock by hand, Mike and Gabe create
the site from the field. They work to capture
images, write about what's happening, and
enlist the rest of the team to do interviews
and answer kid's questions. Most of the work
takes place offline and at night, when it's
cool and the equipment is under less strain.
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