New Meteorite Men Television Series In Production

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Filed Under (Meteorite TV Shows) by geoking on 23-08-2009

Following the success of the one-hour pilot, which has aired about twenty times since its premiere during May of 2009, Science Channel has ordered a new series of Meteorite Men episodes.

The new series of one-hour science/adventure programs will continue to co-star meteorite hunters Steve Arnold and Geoff Notkin as they search for rare and valuable rocks from space. Eric Schotz and Ruth Rivin return as executive producers for LMNO Productions of Encino, California, and Bob Melisso will continue on a supervising producer. Sonya Bourn and Kathy Williamson joined the production team in August.

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The cast and crew of Meteorite Men on location in Kiowa County, Kansas, filming the pilot in early October, 2008

Pre-production work is already underway at some top secret sites and there will be some surprises in store for viewers in the new episodes. The new series of Meteorite Men will air in 2010 on the Science Channel.

Co-host Geoff Notkin will be writing a behind-the-scenes “Making of Meteorite Men TV Diary” as part of his daily science blog, The Logical Lizard, for TucsonCitizen.com.

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Meteorite Men the Television Show

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Filed Under (Expeditions, Meteorite Hunting, Meteorite TV Shows) by geoking on 19-05-2009

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Sometimes dreams do come true: The author (above left) and Steve Arnold with a 230-lb Brenham pallasite recovered during the filming of Meteorite Men. The meteorite was buried about four feet underground and had to be excavated using a back hoe. Photograph by Caroline Palmer © Aerolite Meteorites.

So, after seventeen months of work Meteorite Men is finally a reality.

When LMNO Productions Executive Producer Ruth Rivin first contacted Steve Arnold and me and asked if we’d ever thought about doing a television series about our meteorite hunting adventures I replied: “That’s all we’ve been thinking about for the past two years.” After appearing in episodes of The Best Places to Find Cash & Treasures for the Travel Channel, Wired Science for PBS, Naked Earth: Our Atmosphere for National Geographic and Cosmic Collisions for Discovery, Steve and I realized we really liked making adventure TV documentaries and wanted to do more.

Ruth is a very accomplished career producer and actually heard about us first through a Los Angeles Times article about Steve. She hadn’t seen any of our shows, so I sent her copies of some of our earlier work and the long journey from an idea on a piece of paper to a cable network adventure documentary began. In February, 2008 producer Elizabeth Meeker flew out to Tucson to meet with Steve and me during the annual gem show. We had one day to shoot enough material for a five-minute reel that would be sent out to networks in the hope of generating interest in an ongoing meteorite series. We started early and filmed first in our showroom at the InnSuites hotel, which actually required us to close down the room for a while, right in the middle of the world’s biggest gem and mineral show. After a quick lunch I drove the three of us out to a small but scenic canyon northwest of Tucson. Even though the terrain looks wild and rugged in the reel, I was concerned that the sounds of passing traffic might ruin the mood. But Elizabeth kept her back to passing motorists and while watching the short, you’d really think we were way out in the boonies.

That reel, combined no doubt with LMNO chief Eric Schotz’s enthusiasm, landed us some high level meetings. In July of 2008, Steve and I flew out to Washington, D.C. to meet with Ruth, Eric, and some serious movers and shakers the cable TV world. Science Channel, part of the Discovery network, ordered a one-hour pilot, and then the real work started.

Veteran TV producer Bob Melisso was brought on board as supervising producer and also directed the location shooting. I was thrilled to learn that Bob would hire the supremely talented Randall Love as the director of photography. Randy has worked for Lucas Films making Star Wars documentaries, for the BBC, Discovery, HBO, PBS, Disney and just about any other notable TV or movie company you can think of. He has a wonderful eye for detail, especially natural history subjects, and I can’t imagine anyone doing a better job of filming Meteorite Men than Randy.

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Location shooting for Meteorite Men took place in October of 2008. Here Steve and Geoff try to figure out why they are digging up so much scrap iron at the secret Alpha site. Producer Elizabeth Meeker is in the red jacket; Director of Photography Randall Love wears a white shirt and ball cap, while Director and Supervising Producer Bob Melisso focuses on the action. Photograph by Caroline Palmer © Aerolite Meteorites.

Initial location shooting took place in the famous Brenham, Kansas strewnfield where Steve made his record breaking meteorite discovery back in 2005 and also at a second site, so secret that all members of the location crew were required to sign confidentiality agreements before filming began. We had five days for the primary locations, followed by an exciting day at ASU Tempe’s Center for Meteorite Studies, where we got to meet with meteorite academic luminaries Dr. Meenakshi Wadhwa and Dr. Laurence Garvie. Small pieces were removed from a couple of our finds, and examined in the iBeam lab, which showed that their chemical composition matched representative Brenham specimens in the university’s collection (we knew they would, but it made for good TV and upped the hard science quotient).

Our film crew amassed about seventy-five hours of footage from the three locations, and that had to be edited down into 43 minutes of actual air time. Quite a feat for even the most talented of editosr. In March of 2009 I was in Los Angeles on business for a couple of days and had the opportunity to sit in on the audio mix of the show. What a treat for a musician and former audio engineer! Ruth and I, and our editing and sound team spent the evening in a very chic high-end mixing studio in Burbank, California, and I finally got to see the show for the first time.

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Filming at ASU’s Center for Meteorite Studies with Dr. Meenakshi Wadhwa (left), Steve Arnold (center) and the author, along with a few big space rocks we brought along for show-and-tell. Photograph by Qynne Arnold © Aerolite Meteorites.

The world premiere took place on May 10 on the Science Channel, and was also broadcast in high definition on Science Channel HD. We threw a small premiere party at the Aerolite Meteorites headquarters in Tucson. By a lovely coincidence my father, Sam Notkin, who so inspired me when I was a little boy by his interest in astronomy, was here for the screening. New York City rock ‘n’ roll musician Anne Husick flew in specially with her boyfriend Mike Reed, and Nancy and Dr. Larry Lebofsky, co-editors of Meteorite magazine joined us, along with a few other close friends. The Arnold family had their own get together in Arkansas and we compared notes the next day.

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The author stares intently at the screen during the Meteorite Men world premiere, while location photographer Caroline Palmer gently reminds him not to take space rocks quite so seriously. Photograph by Stu Jenks, Fezziwig Photography © Stu Jenks.

May 10 was most definitely a day to remember.

To learn more about the show, please visit the official Meteorite Men website, and you are invited to follow the Meteorite Men on Twitter for the latest news. Additional Meteorite Men show times can be found on the Science Channel website. Also, please check out the August 2009 issue of Meteorite magazine which will feature an exclusive behind-the-scenes article about the making of Meteorite Men.

Oh, and one more thing. We want to make a lot more episodes, so please tell Science Channel they need to send us back out to find more rocks. Not sure that we can top a 230-pounder and a 273-pounder from Brenham, plus over a hundred pounds from the secret Alpha site — all in one episode — but we’re game to try if you’re willing to tune in.

UNTIL THEN . . . WATCH THE SKIES!

The Great West Texas Meteorite Hunt

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Filed Under (Expeditions, Meteorite Hunting) by geoking on 09-03-2009

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A small oriented meteorite, untouched by human hands just as found in the West, Texas strewnfield.
Photograph by Steve Arnold.

Anyone who took part in the Great Texas Fireball Hunt of February, 2009 will remember it for as long as they live.

On the afternoon of February 15, while the Aerolite Meteorites team was hard at work breaking down our showroom at the close of the 2009 Tucson gem and mineral show, a spectacular fireball was caught on film by a cameraman covering a sports event in Austin, Texas. We couldn’t have imagined it at the time, but that fireball was approximately 120 miles away from the man filming — somewhere over McClennan County, near Waco.

Forty five minutes after receiving news that Ron Dilulio of the University of North Texas had recovered two fragments, my close friend and expedition partner, Steve Arnold, was in the car headed from Arkansas to central Texas. He drove all night and arrived in the vicinity of the suspected strewnfield shortly after dawn. Steve stayed up all of that day hunting, without success. On his second day he found a small freshly fallen meteorite and called me immediately. I got up at 4 am the next morning, packed my gear quickly, and headed to the airport with Suzanne Morrison, a fellow Tucson-based meteorite hunter and member of the Aerolite team. We rented a Toyota truck at Dallas, Love Field, and blasted down Interstate 35E, eager to get to the fall zone as quickly as possible.

I often wonder what we used to do before cell phones. We never could have found our colleagues out there without one. I was on the line with Steve for much of the trip. As we neared the small town of West, Texas he told me to leave the highway at an obscure exit and to “look for us by the side of the road.” We found Steve’s car parked haphazardly on a grass bank and were delighted to learn that our great friend Sonny Clary — a highly skilled meteorite hunter from Las Vegas — had already connected with Steve, and both were in hot pursuit of the new fall.

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Suzanne Morrison laughs, Sonny Clary makes the secret sign, while Steve tries to act serious and figure out where the fireball went. Photograph by Geoffrey Notkin

“Welcome to the strewnfield,” Steve boomed, shaking our hands — dressed as usual in a khaki shirt, baggy blue jeans, florescent yellow sunglasses, and sneakers.

Our first duty was to interview a farmer who witnessed the fireball and heard multiple sonic booms, while out trimming a tree. He pointed to the exact spot where he saw the brilliant bolide, and he was quite adamant that the meteorite had rocketed straight over his head, leaving behind a slowly fading smoke trail.

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“You say it was this big?” Steve Arnold discusses the February 15 Texas fireball with a local landowner who witnessed the spectacle. Photograph by Geoffrey Notkin.

We followed Steve to a site east of West (yes, I know that sounds wrong, but it isn’t) where a rival team had recovered a few meteorite specimens. More of our friends were arriving by the hour, and we hunted with them until sunset, with no luck. However, we did have the unexpected pleasure of meeting Hopper The Meteorite Dog, a petite female collie mix who somehow located a 71-gram stone meteorite which she proceeded to deposit on her owner’s porch.

Steve and our friend Ruben Garcia took off late that evening to scout, and I really should have gone with them because Steve discovered a new area of the strewnfield just around dusk. Once he’d shared this information, everyone in earshot was eager to join up with us. We agreed to meet in front of a supermarket north of Waco at 5:30 am the next morning, in order to arrive the new site by sunrise. When Suzanne and I rolled up at 5:29, we were rather surprised to find four other vehicles waiting for us, each with several passengers. It was one of the greatest meteorite hunting teams ever assembled. In addition to Steve and Sonny, Suzanne and myself, waiting for us were hardened hunters Mike Miller and Ruben also from my home state of Arizona, Rob Wesel and Patrick Thompson from Oregon, and Jason Philips from Illinois. Noted collector Jim Schwade joined us the next day, and soon after Mike Bandli arrived from Washington State.

As the sun crept up through damp hazy clouds on that first morning, we hit the ground hard. Sonny found three meteorites within ten minutes, and by 11 am, most of our team were carrying around one or more freshly fallen space rocks, reverently placed inside plastic baggies. My first find was an 18.8-gram quarter stone which was lying face up. I was standing in the grass talking to Mike Miller and complaining that I hadn’t found anything yet, when I saw it sitting about eighteen inches from his right foot. “Hey! Is that one!?” I exclaimed. And there it was — a brand new arrival from the Asteroid Belt.

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A complete oriented meteorite, just as it fell in the fields of Texas.
Photograph by Geoffrey Notkin.

We spent that day, and the following six days hiking across fields, ravines, through woodlands, and along white gravel roads. As we fanned out and began mapping the strewnfield I started to realize what a very bizarre strewnfield it was. After studying the fireball video, and noticing what appeared to be four separate fragmentations, I suggested to Steve that we should probably be looking for four overlapping strewnfields. We repeatedly found large and small stones mixed together. Five miles north of what we considered to be the little end of the strewnfield, we discovered stones tinier than the ones at the small end. In addition, nearly all stones were spaced far apart, and in only a couple of instances did we see two meteorites in close proximity. Stone meteorite showers often produce small clusters of meteorites which landed near each other (example: Gold Basin), but even in the most densely packed section of the strewnfield, stones were, on average, about 0.2 miles apart.

Sonny and Steve hiked off on their own and found an encouraging open space with flat, dry, hard, yellow/ochre soil. It was such a promising spot that the entire team spent the next 2 1/2 days gridding every inch of it, and the field produced over sixty stones, with our team collecting over one hundred stones total, from various different sites. The best part: the vast majority of the stones were perfect 100% fusion-crusted individuals. Many were oriented, and a few showed flow lines and rollover lips. The crust was so fresh it almost glowed blue black in the bright Texas sun. Only about one stone in ten was broken. A few were found face up, their white interiors difficult to spot against light colored earth.

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Who said meteorite hunting is serious business? [left to right] Jason Philips, Rob Wesel, Steve Arnold, Jim Schwade, Suzanne Morrison and Patrick Thompson goof around for a few minutes while celebrating another new find. Photograph by Geoffrey Notkin.

My great friend John Sinclair rolled in from Virginia and it was a treat to see him again. We hadn’t hunted together since the Park Forest fall of 2003. Most nights, our entire gang got together for a raucous dinner — eight, nine or ten hungry and thirsty meteorite hunters who had hoofed it for at least ten miles across rough terrain in record high temperatures for that time of year. Mike Bandli kept his GPS attached to him at all times and clocked eighteen miles during one day’s hike.

I was walking right beside Mike, early in the chilly morning of our sixth day on the ground, when he suddenly dropped to his knees, and shouted out: “Oh my god, I found one!” He is an experienced collector but it was his first-ever personal find. He almost went into orbit for a moment himself, but kept his wits about him and immediately handed me his digital video recorder. “Geoff, would you do the honors?” And it was a real treat to document that moment for him.

Patrick Thomspon, son of veteran meteorite dealer Edwin “E.T.” Thompson stunned everyone by finding more stones that some of the pros. It was his first successful meteorite hunt, and I’m going to have to keep a very close watch on that guy in the future : )

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“I know it’s windy, but try not to blink.” Geoff doing an on-site interview for Austin Channel 8 News
Photograph by Mike Bandli.

Sonny found a gorgeous oriented individual next to a wire fence that looks uncannily like a black flying saucer. But it was my good friend, and fellow Tucsonan, Suzanne Morrison who won the prize. While scouting with Sonny she came across a large complete individual, completely crusted and highly oriented. It’s one of the most fabulous stone meteorites I’ve ever seen, and I shall remain pleasantly jealous for many years.

I hiked over a hundred miles, and put almost 900 miles on the rental truck, driving around the strewnfield. Most of the landowners we met were extremely gracious and generous in giving permission to hunt on their properties, but we did encounter a couple of lunatics who shouted and ordered us off their land. We were careful and respectful of our hosts’ land, packed out all our trash and kept landowners posted regarding our finds.

When planting began, the big tractors rolled in and tore up the pristine flat surfaces in just a couple of days, making it almost impossible to find additional pieces but, hey, I got to ride with the owner in his big planter, and that was almost as fabulous as finding meteorites.

One night, near the end of the trip, I was too exhausted to hunt past sunset, and started heading back to the truck an hour earlier than usual. On some odd whim, I decided to backtrack, and cut diagonally across a section of ground we had not fully covered. And there it was, plain as day: a triangular, 100% crusted, perfectly oriented stone half buried in the dirt. It was my favorite find of the trip.

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Look at that impact pit. A 100% fusion crusted individual from the Texas meteorite fall, smacked into the hard, dry soil. Photograph by Geoffrey Notkin.

I returned to the Aerolite Meteorites HQ in Tucson with thirteen new arrivals to planet Earth in my field pack. Eleven were complete individuals, with one half stone and one quarter stone. The total recovered weight of this fall is very low. Estimates are currently around two to three kilograms, which is a tiny amount. There are a lot of collectors out there, and specimens are changing hands for good money.

My thirteen West, Texas black beauties will stay with me as long as I’m around. I worked hard to get them, and they are worth more than money to me. Steve Arnold has a few left for sale, and if you want one, contact him soon and tell him Geoff sent you. Maybe I’ll get a kickback : )

One of my best expeditions — ever. I’ll never forget those long sunny days east of West.

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With my birthday twin and expedition partner, the mighty Steve Arnold.
Photograph by Suzanne Morrison.

WATCH THE SKIES!