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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Moon now has hundreds of artefacts on its surface

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WASHINGTON: Three rovers, six US flags, dozens of probes that either landed successfully or crashed, tools, cameras and trash: the Moon is dotted with hundreds of objects as a result of space exploration.


Some experts are calling to grant them heritage status to protect them from future tourists and human activity.


It all started on September 13, 1959 when Soviet probe Luna 2 smashed into Mare Imbrium, its 390 kilograms of mass vaporising, no doubt, on impact.


It was followed in succession by more Luna probes, then it was the Americans’ turn with the Ranger and Surveyor programmes.


And then, on July 20, 1969, the first humans, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin.


The pair spent 22 hours on the Sea of Tranquility. They left behind everything that wasn’t necessary to taken back: the lunar module’s descent stage, cameras, lunar boots, tongs, commemorative objects, and four “defecation collection devices.” Five more successful Apollo missions left behind hundreds of additional objects.


All told, the Moon has about a hundred sites where people have left their mark, according to For All Moonkind, a non-profit that seeks to preserve human heritage in space.


That’s about 167 tonnes of material.


Legally, “the sites themselves aren’t protected at all,” said Michelle Hanlon, a law professor at the University of Mississippi who co-founded For All Moonkind in 2017 after the head of the European Space Agency Jan Worner joked that he wanted to bring back the American flag.


“So the boot prints, the rover tracks, where items are on the site, which is so important, from an archaeological standpoint, they have no protection,” she added.


— AFP


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