NASA prepares for moon tourism

Pack your rockets. The newest national park may be on the moon.

While NASA isn't headed back there anytime soon, space tourists may flock to the lunar landing sites in the near future.

That's helped fuel a nascent effort to declare sites as historic preserves or national parks to make sure the sites are protected from disruption.

In part, it's a recognition of the one thing tourists love to bring home: souvenirs.

"Looting, that would be pretty bad," says archaeologist Beth O'Leary of New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. Looting is the bane of archaeological sites, and O'Leary has spearheaded efforts to protect the landing sites before tourists leave Earth. "I put landing people on the moon up there with creating fire as a technological achievement."

From 1969 to 1972, NASA placed six manned space missions on the moon. Each one landed in a different spot, but in each case American astronauts left behind artifacts. The first, Apollo 11, left things ranging from a "Camera, Lunar TV" to a "Urine Collection Assembly (Small)."

The space agency released guidelines this summer on protecting sites and artifacts. They call for a 1,200-acre "no-fly" zone around the first landing site by Apollo 11 and the final one by . Under those guidelines, tourists could only walk within 82 yards of the Apollo 11 landing site where first took "one small step for man," on July 20, 1969.

What's the rush? NASA had started to get questions from the two dozen or more teams competing for the $30 million Lunar X Prize for the "first privately funded teams to safely land a robot on the surface of the Moon."

That raised the prospect of private spaceships landing near the spot where and Neil Armstrong first walked. Part of the prize involves driving a robot rover about a third of a mile on the moon. And who would want to see Armstrong's footprints obliterated by a robot track.

"This really is unprecedented," says NASA's Robert Kelso of the Johnson Space Center in Houston, who headed the guideline effort. "We went looking at NASA for guidelines on this (preservation effort), and we really didn't have anything."

(c)2011 USA Today
Distributed by MCT Information Services

Citation: NASA prepares for moon tourism (2011, November 15) retrieved 19 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2011-11-nasa-moon-tourism.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

NASA honors Apollo moon walker Buzz Aldrin

0 shares

Feedback to editors