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Randy L. Korotev

Dr. Randy Korotev is a lunar geochemist. He has studied lunar samples and their chemical compositions since 1969 when the Apollo 11 astronauts collected the first lunar samples on the Moon and brought them to Earth (Haskin et al., 1970). He received both his B.S. (1971) and Ph.D. (1976) degrees in chemistry from the University of Wisconsin - Madison. He has been at Washington University in Saint Louis since 1979, where he is a research associate professor. He runs a laboratory for instrumental neutron activation analysis, a technique that can determine the concentrations of 30 or more chemical elements in small samples without destroying the samples. He was a member of the 1988-89 ANSMET team, which collected more than 870 meteorites from the Lewis Cliff and MacAlpine Hills areas of Antarctica, including lunar meteorite MAC88104/5 and martian meteorite LEW 88516. He has served on the Curation and Planning Team for Extraterrestrial Materials (CAPTEM, a NASA advisory group), the Meteorite Working Group (MWG, an NSF-NASA advisory group), and is an associate editor of the journals Meteoritics & Planetary Science and Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. He’s authored and co-authored a number of scientific papers about the Moon, lunar meteorites, earthworms, aluminum foil, coal flyash, birds, and some other things.

Before becoming a scientist Dr. Korotev worked as a paper boy, furniture deliverer and installer, dishwasher, playground instructor, factory worker, and as a scrap-metal torch man. He regards himself as a pretty good photographer and cook. In his spare time he’s an avid birder who likes to do Breeding Bird Surveys and Christmas Bird Counts.

  

Disclaimer

Dr. Korotevs main interest in meteorites is with that small fraction (less than 1 in 1000) of meteorites that is from the Moon. He studied the first lunar meteorite to be recognized, ALHA 81005 (Korotev et al., 1983), and has studied most of the subsequently found lunar meteorites. Dr. Korotev is not a geologist, which means he doesnt know as much as he should about terrestrial rocks. He is also not really a meteoriticist, which means that he also doesnt know as much about ‘regular meteorites (the other >99.9%) as he might. However, he does know some real geologists and meteoriticists and he does ask them questions when he is stumped, which happens a lot. Dr. Korotev has personally found many meteorites in Antarctica but he has never found one anywhere else. He has seen lots of meteorites but he hasnt seen them all. Worst of all, on a cold evening in 1989 when his ANSMET team mates showed him the two stones of the MAC 88104/5 lunar meteorites in the field and asked “What do you think about this one?,” he not only did not instantly recognize them as Moon rocks, he said that they werent meteorites at all. He likes to think hes wiser now. He doesnt spell very well, and appreciates it when people point out spelling, grammar, and factual errors on these web sites.

Dr. Korotev receives a lot of e-mail about meteorites and is often slow to respond to those messages. He often does not respond at all to people who send him out-of-focus photos of rocks and who ask Is this a meteorite?  If he does respond, he’ll say, I don't know. I cannot identify a meteorite from a photo. He gets annoyed at persons who do not make the effort to write their questions in full sentences. He feels no obligation to respond to people who do not have the courtesy to give their full name, place of residence, and where they found the rock. He hates to talk on the telephone and really doesn’t want to receive phone calls from people who think they have a meteorite.

He hopes that everybody who reads these web sites will find a lunar meteorite and send him a piece first.
  

 


Dr. Korotev with lunar meteorite LAP 02205 in the Astromaterial Curation Laboratory of the NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston

(photo by Cecilia Satterwhite)
Dr. Korotev collecting a
meteorite in Antarctica

(photo by Roberta Score)
Dr. Korotev’s home town is Green Bay, Wisconsin. His sister gave him the hat.

(photo by Scott Sandford)
A Gentoo Penguin rookery in Antarctica

(photo by Randy Korotev)


www.catchafallingstar.com
www.catchafallingstar.com

Prepared by
: Randy L. Korotev
  
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Washington University in St. Louis

  
Please don’t contact me about the meteorite
you think you've found until you read this and this
.

e-mail
korotev@wustl.edu

Last revised04-Apr-2007
  

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