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The chemical abundances of a galaxys metal-poor stellar population can be used to investigate the earliest stages of its formation and chemical evolution. The Magellanic Clouds are the most massive of the Milky Ways satellite galaxies and are thought to have evolved in isolation until their recent accretion by the Milky Way. Unlike the Milky Ways less massive satellites, little is know about the Magellanic Clouds metal-poor stars. We have used the mid-infrared metal-poor star selection of Schlaufman & Casey (2014) and archival data to target nine LMC and four SMC giants for high-resolution Magellan/MIKE spectroscopy. These nine LMC giants with $-2.4lesssim[text{Fe/H}]lesssim-1.5$ and four SMC giants with $-2.6lesssim[text{Fe/H}]lesssim-2.0$ are the most metal-poor stars in the Magellanic Clouds yet subject to a comprehensive abundance analysis. While we find that at constant metallicity these stars are similar to Milky Way stars in their $alpha$, light, and iron-peak elemental abundances, both the LMC and SMC are enhanced relative to the Milky Way in the $r$-process element europium. These abundance offsets are highly significant, equivalent to $3.9sigma$ for the LMC, $2.7sigma$ for the SMC, and $5.0sigma$ for the complete Magellanic Cloud sample. We propose that the $r$-process enhancement of the Magellanic Clouds metal-poor stellar population is a result of the Magellanic Clouds isolated chemical evolution and long history of accretion from the cosmic web combined with $r$-process nucleosynthesis on a timescale longer than the core-collapse supernova timescale but shorter than or comparable to the thermonuclear (i.e., Type Ia) supernova timescale.
Carbon-enhanced metal poor stars (CEMP) form a significant proportion of the metal-poor stars, their origin is not well understood. Three very metal-poor C-rich turnoff stars were selected from the SDSS survey, observed with the ESO VLT (UVES) to pre
Heavy elements, those produced by neutron-capture reactions, have traditionally shown no star-to-star dispersion in all but a handful of metal-poor globular clusters (GCs). Recent detections of low [Pb/Eu] ratios or upper limits in several metal-poor
The abundances of r-process elements of very metal-poor stars capture the history of the r-process enrichment in the early stage of star formation in a galaxy. Currently, various types of astrophysical sites including neutron star mergers, magneto-ro
We identify six new CEMP stars ([C/Fe]>+0.7 and [Fe/H]< -1.8) and another seven likely candidates within the APOGEE database following Data Release 12. These stars have chemical compositions typical of metal-poor halo stars, e.g., mean [$alpha$/Fe] =
This paper presents the detailed abundances and r-process classifications of 126 newly identified metal-poor stars as part of an ongoing collaboration, the R-Process Alliance. The stars were identified as metal-poor candidates from the RAdial Velocit