Introduction: Beginnings of an Adventure.- Chapter 1: The Lure of the Poles.- Chapter 2: The Mountain and Its Madness.- Chapter 3: First Step: Getting There.- Chapter 4: Second Step: McMurdo.- Chapter 5: Working on the Edge.- Chapter 6: Our Voyage Up the Mountain.- Chapter 7: Landscapes on This and Other Worlds.- Chapter 8: Future Explorations.- Chapter 9: Journal Entries.- Glossary.- Assorted Landmarks.- Index.
Author/artist Michael Carroll received the AAS Division of
Planetary Science’s Jonathan Eberhart Award for the best planetary
science feature article of 2012. He lectures extensively in concert
with his various books and has done invited talks at science
museums, aerospace facilities, and NASA centers. He is a Fellow of
the International Association for the Astronomical Arts and has
written articles and books on topics ranging from space
to archaeology. His articles have appeared in Popular Science,
Astronomy, Sky and Telescope, Astronomy Now (UK), and a host of
international magazines. His twenty-some book titles include Alien
Volcanoes (Johns Hopkins University Press), Space Art (Random
House), Drifting on Alien Winds (Springer 2011) and his cosmic
murder mysteries, On the Shores of Titan’s Farthest Sea and
Europa’s Lost Expedition, both through Springer. His latest book
nonfiction book -- his seventh from Springer -- is Earths of
Distant Suns: How we find them, communicate with them, and maybe
even go there (2016).
Carroll is the 2006 recipient of the Lucien Rudaux Award for
lifetime achievement in the Astronomical Arts. He has done
commissioned artwork for NASA, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and
several hundred magazines throughout the world, including National
Geographic, Time, Smithsonian, Astronomy, and others. One of his
paintings is on the surface of Mars—in digital form—aboard the
Phoenix lander.
Dr. Rosaly M. C. Lopes is a Senior Research Scientist at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, where she is also Manager for Planetary
Science. She has a B.Sc. in Astronomy and a Ph.D. in planetary
geology from University College London (University of London, UK).
She has spent most of her career at NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory working on the science teams for the Galileo and Cassini
missions and pursuing research on planetary and terrestrial
geology, particularly volcanology. She has visited active volcanoes
in all continents and discovered 71 active volcanoes on Jupiter’s
moon Io. In 2006, she was elected Fellow of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science and, in 2015, Fellow of
the Geological Society of America for her contributions to the
studies of volcanism on Earth and the planets. Dr. Lopes has
written more than 120 peer-reviewed scientific publications and
seven books. In addition to her science work, she is a strong
supporter of education and outreach, nationally and
internationally. She has received numerous awards, including the
Carl Sagan medal from the American Astronomical Society.
“The text includes short histories of space and polar explorations as well as the geology, climatology, and chemistry of these areas. Specific landforms, such as lava lakes and ice caves, common to Antarctica and extraterrestrial environments are compared. … this book will delight readers who wonder what it would be like to set foot on Antarctica or even on the Solar System’s planets and moons. Summing Up: Recommended. Undergraduates and general readers.” (L. S. Zipp, Choice, Vol. 56 (5), January, 2019)
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