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May 20, 2010

Mars Institute 'Moon-1' Humvee Rover reaches Devon Island, High Arctic

The Mars Institute's Northwest Passage Drive Expedition - 2010 field team, ready for departure in Resolute Bay on 5 May 2010. From left to right: Mark Carroll, Jean-Christophe Jeauffre, John W. Schutt, Dr Pascal Lee (expedition leader), Jesse Weaver, and Joe Amarualik. Photo Credit: Mars Institute NWPDX-2010 / Jules Verne Adventures
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The Mars Institute's Northwest Passage Drive Expedition - 2010 field team, ready for departure in Resolute Bay on 5 May 2010. From left to right: Mark Carroll, Jean-Christophe Jeauffre, John W. Schutt, Dr Pascal Lee (expedition leader), Jesse Weaver, and Joe Amarualik. Photo Credit: Mars Institute NWPDX-2010 / Jules Verne Adventures

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- An international team of researchers led by Mars Institute scientist Dr. Pascal Lee successfully reached Devon Island, High Arctic, on Sunday, 16 May, 2010 after a 13-day, 150 km vehicular journey from Cornwallis Island to Devon Island, along the fabled Northwest Passage.

The Northwest Passage Drive Expedition team of six departed Resolute Bay, Nunavut, on 5 May aboard the Mars Institute鈥檚 Moon-1 Humvee Rover and two snowmobiles. After encountering several days of immobilizing snowstorms and extremely rough sea-ice conditions, the team finally reached the west coast of late in the evening of 16 May.

鈥淚t鈥檚 both a great joy and a relief to get our Moon-1 onto solid ground on Devon Island鈥 said Lee. 鈥淭his final sea-ice crossing was quite a challenge, but we had a fantastic team and vehicle, and we just kept working at it鈥.

Accompanying Lee were Mars Institute crew members Joe Amarualik, John W. Schutt, and Jesse Weaver, and the Jules Verne Adventures documentary team comprising filmmaker Jean-Christophe Jeauffre and director of photography Mark Carroll.

The primary goal of the Northwest Passage Drive Expedition is to transfer the Mars Institute鈥檚 new Moon-1 Humvee Rover to Devon Island, a location known to present unique scientific and operational similarities to the surface of the and Mars. There, the rover will be used as a concept vehicle simulating future pressurized rovers to be driven by humans to explore other planetary bodies. The expedition is an integral part of the Haughton-Mars Project (HMP) on Devon Island where research in space science and exploration is being conducted by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), the Mars Institute, the SETI Institute, and other partnering organizations.

Map showing the approximate route followed by the Moon-1 Humvee Rover between Resolute Bay, Cornwallis Island, and Domville Point, Devon Island, from 5 to 16 May 2010.
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Map showing the approximate route followed by the Moon-1 Humvee Rover between Resolute Bay, Cornwallis Island, and Domville Point, Devon Island, from 5 to 16 May 2010.

Last year, Lee鈥檚 team logged a record-breaking drive of 494 km in the Moon-1 along a western section of the Northwest Passage, the longest distance ever driven on sea-ice in a road vehicle. This year, the team applied the same winning strategy to avoid the roughest areas of sea-ice along the Wellington Channel. It used a variety of radar satellite remote sensing data and its own surface reconnaissance by snowmobile to find the smoothest possible ice route between Abandon Bay, Cornwallis Island, and Domville Point, Devon Island, where the Moon-1 is now safely parked.

The next step will be to drive the Moon-1 overland to the Haughton-Mars Project Research Station on Devon Island later this Summer, where it will be used in conjunction with the Mars-1 Humvee Rover already deployed there to begin long-range dual pressurized rover exploration studies.

鈥淭he arrival of the Moon-1 on Devon Island ushers in a new phase in our space exploration work that will be critical to enabling humans to explore other worlds sooner, more safely, and more productively鈥 remarked Lee.

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Provided by JPL/NASA

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