China Daily

Moon dust’s astronomic­al price

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NEW YORK — A bag used by US astronaut Neil Armstrong to bring the first samples of moon dust back to Earth was sold to an anonymous bidder for $1.8 million at an auction in New York on Thursday, marking the 48th anniversar­y of the first moon landing.

The bag, which for years sat unidentifi­ed in a box at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, was bought by a person who bid by telephone and did not wish to be named publicly, auctioneer Sotheby’s said.

Auctioneer­s had expected the bag to fetch between $2 million and $4 million.

It was the highest-value item at an auction of moon memorabili­a that included the Apollo 13 flight plan annotated by its crew, which sold for $275,000, a spacesuit worn by US astronaut Gus Grissom, which sold for $43,750, and a famous image of Buzz Aldrin of Apollo 11 on the moon taken by Neil Armstrong, which went for $35,000.

When Armstrong and his Apollo 11 crew came home in July of 1969, the fate of the 30-by-22-centimeter bag, labeled “Lunar Sample Return”, was unknown for decades. After disappeari­ng from the Johnson center, it surfaced in the garage of the manager of a Kansas museum, Max Ary, who was convicted of its theft in 2014, according to court records.

The bag was seized by the US Marshals Service which put it up for online government auction three times, drawing no bids, until it was bought in 2015 for $995 by a Chicago-area attorney, Nancy Lee Carlson.

She sent the bag to NASA for authentica­tion, and when tests revealed it was used by Armstrong and still had moon dust traces inside, the US space agency decided to keep it.

Carlson successful­ly sued NASA to get the bag back, and the attention created by her legal challenge prompted many inquiries from potential buyers, according to Sotheby’s. That led Carlson to decide to auction it again.

One group criticized the decision to sell a piece of space history.

“The bag belongs in a museum, so the entire world can share in and celebrate the universal human achievemen­t it represents,” said Michelle Hanlon co-founder of For All Moonkind, a nonprofit organizati­on formed to persuade the United Nations to adopt measures to preserve the six Apollo lunar-landing sites.

 ?? RICHARD DREW / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A bag containing moon dust brought back to earth by Neil Armstrong, was sold at an auction in New York.
RICHARD DREW / ASSOCIATED PRESS A bag containing moon dust brought back to earth by Neil Armstrong, was sold at an auction in New York.

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