Neil Armstrong’s moon bag fetches $1.8 mn at auction
The long-lost bag used by NASA astronaut Neil Armstrong to collect the first-ever moon samples has been sold for a whopping $1,812,500 at an auction in the US.
The bag, auctioned on the occasion of the 48th anniversary of mankind’s first moon landing, was expected to fetch $2-4 million. It still contains traces of the moon dust, Sotheby's said.
During the Apollo 11 mission in 1969, Armstrong collected nearly 500 grammes of material finer than one centimetre, as well as 12 rock fragments larger than a centimetre from five different locations on the lunar surface in the region known as the Sea of Tranquility.
Given the then unknown nature of lunar material, the decontamination bag was used to minimise any potential harm the samples might pose to the Command Module and planet Earth.
Nearly all of the equipment from that historic mission is housed in the US National Collections at the Smithsonian; however a recent court ruling has allowed this to be the only such artefact in private hands. The true history of the bag went unknown for decades until just a year ago.
It was offered three separate times in 2014 by a small auction house on behalf of the US Marshall’s service, garnering not a single bid.
It was re-listed in 2015, where it was sold for $995.
Scientific tests at NASA revealed the dust in the bag to be moon dust, specifically from the Apollo 11 landing site, and the part number printed inside of the bag matched up to that of the “Contingency Lunar Sample Return Decontamination Bag” listed in the Apollo 11 Stowage list.