The Asian Age

Give us our moon dust, cockroache­s: Nasa

-

Boston, June 24: Nasa wants its moon dust and cockroache­s back.

The space agency has asked Boston-based RR Auction to halt the sale of moon dust collected during the 1969 Apollo 11 mission that had subsequent­ly been fed to cockroache­s during an experiment to determine if the lunar rock contained any sort of pathogen that posed a threat to terrestria­l life.

The material, a Nasa lawyer said in a letter to the auctioneer, still belongs to the federal government.

The material from the experiment, including a vial with about 40 milligrams of moon dust and three cockroach carcasses, was expected to sell for at least $4,00,000, but has been pulled from the auction block, RR said.

All Apollo samples, as stipulated in this collection of items, belong to Nasa and no person, university, or other entity has ever been given permission to keep them after analysis, destructio­n, or other use for any purpose, especially for sale or individual display, said Nasa’s letter dated June 15.

It went on: We are requesting that you no longer facilitate the sale of any and all items containing the Apollo 11 Lunar Soil Experiment (the cockroache­s, slides, and postdestru­ctive testing specimen) by immediatel­y stopping the bidding process,” Nasa wrote. In another letter dated June 22, Nasa’s lawyer asked RR Auction to work with the current owner of the material to return it to the federal government.

The Apollo 11 mission br-ought more than 47 pounds of lunar rock back to Earth. Some was fed to insects, fish and other small creatures to see if it would kill them. — AP

 ?? ??
 ?? AP ?? (Top left) The moon dust from the 1969 Apollo 11 mission. (Top right) Cockroache­s which were fed moon dust from the 1969 Apollo 11 mission. —
AP (Top left) The moon dust from the 1969 Apollo 11 mission. (Top right) Cockroache­s which were fed moon dust from the 1969 Apollo 11 mission. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India