• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Who Exactly Owns Neil Armstrong’s Moon Poop? And Why Is It So Important We Get It Back?

September 6, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

On the Moon, as well as several robots, some tardigrades, a family photograph, and maybe even some dinosaur remains, you will find 96 bags of human poop.

On the way up to the Moon, Apollo astronauts collected their urine in tanks, while anyone who needed to poop had to strap a bag over their anus to do so. These bags, along with other waste and trash, were taken to the Moon with the astronauts, who deposited them on the lunar surface to free up weight space for samples of the Moon. In fact, the first ever photograph taken on the Moon by Armstrong featured one of these bags of trash.

Advertisement

While it’s unusual to be excited about somebody else’s poop, it’s less weird when it comes from astrobiologists. The bags are of interest as they, at least at first, contained microbial life and viruses. Retrieving them and analyzing their contents could tell us whether life could endure these conditions (though don’t get your hopes up) or whether we could potentially end up contaminating other bodies in the solar system as we explore.

Earth’s atmosphere protects us from the harmful effects of UV radiation and keeps the temperatures on Earth habitable. The Moon does not get this protection, and models have predicted that spores will likely become sterilized within one lunation (lunar month). 

However, we are always being surprised by life’s ability to, uh, find a way, so we can’t rule out the possibility entirely. In 2020, Japanese researchers found that dried bacteria were able to survive for three years on the exterior of the International Space Station (ISS), while in 2017 Russian cosmonauts also found bacteria living on the outside of the ISS. They survived temperatures – ranging from 121°C (250°F) to -157°C (-250°F) – similar to those on the Moon. Given bacteria’s remarkable ability to be revived (sometimes millions of years later) it’s at least worth glancing at Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s poop.

So who owns the poop, and who is protecting it now? Well, the US has given the Apollo 11 landing site and the artifacts left there heritage status. Under the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, which the US signed up to, they legally own the artifacts (though the site itself, and the Moon and other celestial bodies, are considered the common heritage of humanity). One problem is that nobody is really responsible for their own space junk, something scientists are hoping we will soon correct.

Advertisement

In short, there is a surprising amount of poop on the Moon, and it’s valuable enough for scientists to want to claim it. Neil Armstrong’s poop, while claimed by the US among other Apollo 11 artifacts, is not very well protected by providing it heritage status, while other bags of poop are much more up for grabs. Just don’t go whining to NASA when you don’t like the contents.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Chinese court rules against #MeToo plaintiff
  2. France says Mali must stick to election timetable
  3. Blinken meets Lopez Obrador to soothe thorny U.S.-Mexico relations
  4. What Would Happen To Humanity If All Microbes Suddenly Disappeared?

Source Link: Who Exactly Owns Neil Armstrong's Moon Poop? And Why Is It So Important We Get It Back?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • There Used To Be 27 Letters In The English Alphabet, Until One Mysteriously Vanished
  • Why You Need To Stop Chucking That “Liquid Gold” Down Your Kitchen Sink
  • Youngest Mammoth Fossils Ever Found Turn Out To Be Whales… 400 Kilometers From The Coast
  • The First Wheelchair User To Travel To Space Is About To Make History
  • “It Was Bigger Than A Killer Whale”: 66 Million-Year-Old Tooth Suggests Mosasaurs Were Hunting In Rivers, Not Just Seas
  • Killer Whales And Dolphins Team Up In First-Ever Footage Of Cooperative Hunting
  • Why Does Chocolate In Advent Calendars Taste Different From Normal Chocolate?
  • Why Do Sheep And Goats Have Rectangular Pupils?
  • What Kind Of Parents Were Dinosaurs?
  • First Images Of A Tatooine-Like Planet That Orbits Its Two Stars Closer Than We’ve Seen Before
  • JWST Finds Earliest Supernova Yet, From When The Universe Was Just 730 Million Years Old
  • How A Comet On Christmas Day Changed What We Knew About Space
  • What Color Was Diplodocus? First-Ever Sauropod Fossils With Melanosomes Bring Us A Step Closer To Finding Out
  • Why Do NASA’s Voyager Spacecraft Sometimes Get Closer To Earth, As They Head Out Of The Solar System?
  • What Is The Fastest Animal In The World?
  • Would The Burglars Have Survived “Home Alone”? We Asked An Intensive Care Doctor
  • World’s First-Ever Dictionary Of Ancient Celtic Languages Set To Be Created
  • Fresh From Capturing Image Of 3I/ATLAS, NASA’s MAVEN Suffers “Anomaly” And Is No Longer Communicating With Earth
  • Thought “Superflu” Was Bad? Strap In: It’s Norovirus Season In The US
  • Why Does Evolution Turn Everything Into Crabs?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version