Khaleej Times

Bag this and go over the moon

- Reuters

new york — It is a simple, square white bag that travelled to the moon in 1969 on Apollo 11 and carried back to the earth the first sample of lunar material ever collected. That bag could fetch up to $4 million when it goes on the auction block at Sotheby’s New York in July.

The bag — which contains remnants of moon dust and is labelled ‘lunar sample return’ — is a collection pouch used by astronaut Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, during the Apollo 11 mission. The bag was used to hold rocks and dust from the lunar region known as the Sea of Tranquilit­y.

Scheduled for July 20, the 48th anniversar­y of the Apollo 11 moon landing, the auction will be the first legal sale of such an artifact from the mission, Jim Hull, head of exhibits and artifacts at the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion (Nasa), said in a telephone interview on Friday.

While there are legal restrictio­ns on sales of material from

moon missions, including lunar rocks and dust, it is believed some items have been sold on the black market.

The bag wound up at Sotheby’s after a roundabout journey that included an attempt by Nasa to get it back from its current owner.

Apollo 11 blasted off on July 16, 1969, with three astronauts aboard. Four days later, Armstrong and astronaut Edwin ‘Buzz’ Aldrin flew the spacecraft Eagle down to the moon’s surface. As part of the mission, the astronauts gathered lunar samples.

After nearly 22 hours on the moon, Armstrong and Aldrin returned to the lunar module, lifted off and rejoined Michael Collins in the Columbia spacecraft for the journey back to Earth. They landed on July 24 and received a hero’s welcome.

But the collection pouch got mixed up with other sample bags that were never used to hold lunar materials, Hull said.

At one point, the bag was seized the United States Department of Justice during an investigat­ion, and then mistakenly auctioned off to its current owner, Chicago-area attorney Nancy Lee Carlson. Interested in the history of the bag, Carlson sent it to be analysed by Nasa, which confirmed its provenance through testing.

Ownership of both moon rocks or dust and artifacts from lunar missions is generally restricted, Hull said, and upon identifyin­g the bag and finding that it contained remnants of lunar dust, the space agency sought to keep it. —

 ??  ?? MONEY BAG: The Apollo 11 lunar sample return bag could fetch up to $4m at the auction
MONEY BAG: The Apollo 11 lunar sample return bag could fetch up to $4m at the auction

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