Seeking to preserve the site where humans first set foot on the moon, a California state panel on Friday registered a collection of 106 objects left by the Apollo 11 mission as an historical resource.
The move by the state Historical Resources Commission marks the first such designation for cultural artifacts located other than on Earth, said Lisa Westwood, part of a team of scholars and museum professionals who applied for the listing.
The group hopes that placing the moon objects on California's registry of historic landmarks and resources will lead ultimately to designating Tranquility Base as a United Nations World Heritage Site.
"We are elevating the profile of this resource, and instilling upon the public, which could include space travelers at some point, a sense of site stewardship and the importance of preservation," said Westwood, an archeologist who teaches at Chico State University.
The collection encompasses about 5,000 pounds of objects, ranging from the bottom stage of the lunar lander to the American flag planted on the moon's surface on July 16, 1969 by astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin.
It also includes a seismic monitor left behind to record moonquakes and a high-tech mirror used to reflect laser beams aimed at the lunar surface from Earth to measure the precise distance between it and the moon.
LUNAR CASTOFFS
Less lofty is an assortment of junk cast off by the astronauts -- space boots, tools, arm rests, empty food containers and bags of human waste -- to lighten their load for the takeoff from the moon back to Earth.
An inventory of the items was made through independent research conducted for several years by Ralph Gibson, a program manager at the Placer County Museums near Sacramento, with $22,000 in grants from NASA.
The artifacts were left spread over an area nearly 330 feet across.
But the listing was carefully written to include only the objects -- not the site itself or even the astronauts' footprints -- because international law precludes any country or state from making a claim to the lunar surface, said Jay Correia, a state historian who oversees the registry.
abcnews.go.com
Newsletter
Subscribe to our Newsletter. Each week you will get one fantastic free eBook in our newsletter. This week the free ebook is a treaty about the Map of The Sky full of images. Try now! We respect your privacy, no spam at all.
Recent Posts
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Follow me on facebook
Popular Posts
-
More than a year after an explosion of sparks, soot and frigid helium shut it down, the world’s biggest and most expensive physics experime...
-
A new study came to a rather surprising conclusion about our Moon . An amazing new study has revealed that the moon had a massive change i...
-
Here are 10 victories for our air and water, our special places and our climate from the last twelve months in 2015, all made possible by ...
-
A PhD student from the London Centre for Nanotechnology has won a prize for solving a decade-long mystery central to understanding modern m...
-
The world of mathematical academia is in a state of disarray since the establishment of a new theorem in basic mathematic fundamentals last...
No comments:
Post a Comment