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From the Archives: NASA’s Goddard Instrument Field Team at Long Valley Caldera [1]
['Caela Barry']
Date: 2025-08-18
From the Archives: NASA’s Goddard Instrument Field Team at Long Valley Caldera
Editor’s note: This blog entry is adapted from NASA social media content originally published September 12-15, 2023.
Hello from NASA’s Goddard Instrument Field Team (GIFT for short)! In September 2023, we spent several days as guest researchers at California’s Long Valley Caldera and the Bishop Tuff, east of the Sierra Nevada mountain range, studying the remains of an ancient supervolcano.
Goddard Instrument Field Team scientists at the edge of the Owens River Gorge. Back row L-R: Ernie Bell, John West, Jingchuan Wang, Sam Hudziak, Linden Wike, Jacob Giles, Naoma McCall, David Hollibaugh Baker, Stephen Scheidt, Patrick Whelley, David Crown. Front row L-R: Elisha Jhoti, Emileigh Thackston (Shoemaker), Alexandra Matiella Novak. NASA/Caela Barry
Long, long ago – think 760,000 years! – a column of ash, gas, and rocky debris blasted high into the sky above what is now central California. When the eruption column collapsed, hot debris flow and ashfall blanketed many square miles of Earth’s surface. The ground we’re standing on is what’s left of that ancient eruption.
Long Valley Caldera lies east of the Sierra Nevada, in central California. USGS
Our task: learn how this caldera, or large volcanic crater, fits into the bigger story of past and present volcanic activity in our solar system. Earth isn’t the only place with an explosive history. Venus and Mars both show evidence of very large volcanoes, our own Moon has a volcanic past, and Jupiter’s moon Io is extremely volcanically active today. The Long Valley Caldera region has characteristics in common with large-scale volcanic terrains on Mars, and members of our team are working to learn how Arabia Terra’s super eruptions may have changed the Martian environment. If you want to understand volcanoes on other worlds (and we do), it helps to start close to home.
Elisha Jhoti, Emileigh Thackston (Shoemaker), and David Hollibaugh Baker use ground-penetrating radar to scan the subsurface of an ancient volcanic landscape. NASA/Caela Barry
The Ground-Penetrating Radar or GPR Team (nickname: Team GRIT) carefully moves a radar antenna over the surface of the Volcanic Tableland to find out what’s underneath. We use a range of GPR antennae to reveal layers and features hidden underground. Larger antennae have a longer range, but they return lower-resolution data. Smaller antennae deliver higher-resolution images from closer to the surface.
Jingchuan Wang uses a hammer and steel plate to shake the ground. The tremors from each impact travel down a line of sensors spread out over hundreds of feet of desert. Linden Wike and Jacob Giles prepare to monitor the data. NASA/Caela Barry
“Team Seismic” strikes a metal plate with a hammer to generate tiny tremors and monitors the results in real time. We set up a long line of seismic activity detectors, called geophones, to measure the vibrations from each hammer strike. This helps us understand how the subsurface of the landscape is structured. The geophones are sensitive enough to measure footsteps, so everyone nearby pauses briefly during each test.
Naoma McCall gives the “all clear” for a seismic test. NASA/Caela Barry
A hand-held spectrometer gives scientists on-the-spot information about the minerals each rock is made of. Mineral info, together with subsurface data from the Ground-Penetrating Radar and Seismic teams, helps us interpret Long Valley Caldera’s geologic history.
Alexandra Matiella Novak uses a hand-held spectrometer in the field. NASA/Caela Barry
We’ve worked closely with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to operate in permitted areas and minimize the impact of our fieldwork on the environment. Below, BLM team members take a look at the data readout on our hand-held field spectrometer.
Alexandra Matiella Novak shows a field-portable spectrometer to representatives of the California Bureau of Land Management while Patrick Whelley works in the background. NASA/Caela Barry
Meanwhile, “Team SHOVELS” studies the desert left behind by Mono Lake’s shrinking shoreline. The lake is evaporating; we trek across its dried outer reaches to sample the sediment where the water used to be.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Zach Morse, Patrick Casbeer, and Alex Michels collect and document 35 samples over the course of a mile near the edge of Mono Lake. NASA/Caela Barry
Mono Lake has no natural outlets, so as it dries and shrinks, the water that’s left behind gets saltier and saltier. Gale Crater, where NASA’s Curiosity rover landed on Mars, may once have been a closed, salty, evaporating lake, too. Fieldwork helps us understand both places better.
Aerial footage of the site is brought to you by the Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle or UAV team (field nickname: Team GLIDE). This group captures overhead views of the landscape and uses the data to create context videos & topographic maps for our teammates on the ground.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video “Up, up, and away!” Stephen Scheidt, Sam Hudziak, and David Crown prepare for a UAV survey of the field site. NASA/Caela Barry
Aerial and orbital views are critical tools for scientists studying Earth & beyond. From UAV data in the field to satellite images of our changing planet to maps of other worlds, a detailed, big-picture perspective can change everything.
Thanks for joining us! Keep learning about similar environments on different worlds, also called planetary analogs, at the link below.
Similar Landscapes, Different Worlds About Planetary Analogs Our planet isn't the only place with volcanoes, impact craters, quakes, and erosion. Studying extreme environments on Earth helps us to understand other worlds better, too. Learn More NASA scientist Mary Beth Wilhelm collects soil samples from Chile’s Atacama Desert. Studying ancient life in the driest places on Earth helps us to understand conditions on Mars. NASA
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