I think it’s safe to say that my week is never going to feature prominently in the annals of geological science. I’ve spent most of it standing in front of a rock saw, cutting up the cores that I collected from the White Mfolozi River, and getting very muddy in the process. When I haven’t been doing that, I’ve been labelling the resultant samples, and checking that the all-important orientation marks are still clear. Suffice to say, my brain has not been especially taxed by this activity, and the only discovery I have made is the stunningly obvious one that ultra-hard Archean metabasalts are much easier to chop up than friable and fractured Neogene mudstones. Not that this is a bad thing: not having to try and piece together every other sample from the tiny fragments it has exploded into on contact with the saw blade is a pleasant change from my previous experiences in the rock-cutting room.
However, whilst this may not be the most exciting thing that I’m ever going to do, it’s still important; it’s one more step on the long road to actually – hopefully- getting some decent paleomagnetic data to play with. In my lab there are now a whole array of samples laid out, ready to be measured, zapped and/or heated, remeasured, rezapped and/or reheated, remeasured… and after all that, I’ll be able to have my first look at whether these rocks do indeed record a 3 billion year-old magnetic signal, and start thinking about what it tells us. That’s the thing about experimental science; you have to put in a lot of grunt work before the ultimate pay-off.
There is another plus, too: it may be menial, but when you’ve spent a day cutting and running samples, you’re rewarded with the feeling of making tangible progress, which you sometimes miss when you’re endlessly rewriting the same paragraphs for a paper, or fiddling about with the best plot for your data. I set out to do something, and it’s done. No rewrites, no second thoughts, no hazy feelings that it could/should be better. Saying, ‘I prepared 100 samples today’ probably isn’t going to impress anyone else, but it feels good all the same.
Nice plan for content warnings on Mastodon and the Fediverse. Now you need a Mastodon/Fediverse button on this blog.
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