Regina Leader-Post

SCIENTIST LICKED MOON ROCK.

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Robin Brett, a NASA scientist, died Sept. 27 at his home in Washington. He was 84.

The cause was Alzheimer’s disease, said his wife, Jill Brett.

From 1969 to 1974, Brett was chief of geochemist­ry at NASA’S Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston. In July 1969, he was one of just four scientists present for the opening of a sealed box containing the first moon rocks from the initial Apollo lunar mission.

Before that mission, three theories had been debated about how the moon came into existence.

“The first theory held that the moon was torn from the earth by a fission process,” New York Times reporter John Noble Wilford wrote in his book We Reach the Moon. “The second was that the moon was formed at the same time as the earth as a sort of twin planet. The third was that the moon was unrelated to the earth and was captured by earth’s gravity.”

Wilford quoted Brett: “All three theories have weaknesses. The compositio­n of the returned lunar samples makes it difficult to derive them from anything like the compositio­n of the earth’s mantle. This, therefore, makes the fission theory extremely unlikely. And if the moon was formed as an identical twin planet with the same compositio­n as the earth’s mantle, the same argument applies against that theory. The capture theory presents difficulti­es in celestial mechanics and is regarded as statistica­lly fairly improbable.”

The prevailing theory now, said Everett Gibson, an emeritus NASA scientist who also worked on the lunar samples, is that the moon was formed from a major impact on Earth, early in its existence, of another large astronomic­al object.

Peter Robin Brett was born in Australia on Jan. 30, 1935. He got his degree in geology from the University of Adelaide in 1956 and a doctorate in geology and geochemist­ry from Harvard in 1963.

Variously, he worked with the U.S. Geological Survey, NASA, the National Science Foundation and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

His first marriage, to Abigail Trafford, ended in divorce. Survivors include his wife, two daughters, two stepsons, a sister and four grandchild­ren.

The lunar samples were initially quarantine­d, lest they contain or exude a noxious substance. Brett doubted that necessity, which he demonstrat­ed, he said, by becoming the first man on Earth to lick a moon rock. What did it taste like? “A dirty potato,” he answered.

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Robin Brett

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