. 24/7 Space News .
Apollo 12 Remembered - Lunar Germ Colony Or Lab Anomaly?

Tiny earth, a planet that could be blotted out with a lunar astronaut's thumb. Credit: NASA

Moffett Field CA (SPX) Nov 22, 2004
This last week (November 19) marked the thirty-fifth anniversary of Apollo 12's lunar touchdown. As the second manned mission, the lander carried the third and fourth men to walk on the moon. While one of its primary goals was to demonstrate precision touchdown and navigation, its target was a robotic lander that awaited it on the surface. The mission was to retrieve parts of the Surveyor 3 probe.

One astrobiological implication was a series of bacterial culturing experiments. The outcome of that experiment have remained part of the lore of the Apollo program.

The plan was to bring back the camera portion of the probe, but when the recovery was done and results were analyzed in Houston, a remarkable report was generated at the time that buried in the camera's insulating foam was a strain of streptococcus bacteria that appeared to have dessicated and survived three years of protected lunar exposure.

In 1991, when Apollo 12 Commander Pete Conrad reviewed the transcripts of his conversations relayed from the moon back to Earth, he annotated his perspective: "I always thought the most significant thing that we ever found on the whole...Moon was that little bacteria who came back and lived and nobody ever said [anything] about it."

Part of the discussion centered on sample handling. The Apollo 12 results were later dismissed as laboratory error, owing to a single non-sterile handling event.

But the lore continues to occupy some who anticipate that dormant bacteria or microbes may form a possible biological tranfer route between solar system bodies.

The longest exposure time of bacteria to the harsh vacuum of space was a Bacillus strain that was revived after six years in a controlled biological experiment, so even if the Apollo 12 results are questionable, the ability of bacteria to survive extreme environments is not particularly in question.

In 1998, Henry Spencer wrote online that he was not surprised by the Apollo 12 result, " As the original report in "Analysis of Surveyor 3 material and photographs returned by Apollo 12" made clear, there really is nothing very remarkable about a few tough bacteria surviving in that particular location (deep within the camera).

The one aspect of lunar conditions that is a real problem for bacteria is high temperatures, and thermal modelling of the camera estimated the maximum internal temperature at 70 deg C, which is not a big problem for bacteria. And the Surveyors were not sterilized."

Author and space historian, James Oberg wrote in the same thread that 'It is widely believed that streptococcus germs aboard Surveyor-3 (inside the TV camera) survived their three-year lunar sojourn and were brought back to Earth by the Apollo-12 crew. Leonard D. Jaffe was Surveyor project scientist and custodian of the Surveyor 3 parts brought back from the moon.'

He wrote to the Planetary Society recently that according to a report from somebody on his staff who had witnessed the biological test which gave positive results, a "breach of sterile procedure" took place at just the right time to produce a false positive result."

One of the implements being used to scrape samples off the Surveyor parts was laid down on a non-sterile laboratory bench, and then was used to collect surface samples for culturing. It was that sample set which showed the presence of the germs, a common human infectuous bacteria.

Concluded Dr. Jaffe, 'It is, therefore, quite possible that the microorganisms were transferred to the camera after its return to Earth, and that they had never been to the Moon. The test, of course, could only be performed once, and the parts were subsequently taken out of quarantine and fully re-exposed to terrestrial conditions, so we'll never know for sure. But it looks suspiciously like a lab error rather than a lunar germ colony.'

The discussion on the issue continues because of its inherent intrigue for both space history and setting survival boundaries of astrobiological interest.

As Cornell's Bill Nye, a former undergraduate student of Carl Sagan's and latest design advisor for the Mars Sundial Experiment told Astrobiology Magazine recently:

"An astonishing part of the story concerning the recovery of parts from the Surveyor spacecraft is that there were microbes on the spacecraft that had accidentally been left on board, and they successfully stowed-away. They survived for years in the harsh environment of the Moon."

"When they got back to Earth, they continued to grow. It's compelling evidence for astrobiologists that the environmental limits for living things are set pretty far apart."

"Sample return is the next big thing with NASA," says Genesis recovery team chief Bob Corwin, of Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver. "Stardust will also be doing a sample return next year, as will future missions."

Sample return missions currently in progress include spacecraft designed to sample a comet, an asteroid, and the solar wind. Although life is not likely to be found in these places, the precursor chemicals that make life possible may be present.

NASA's Stardust mission, launched in 1999, and reached comet Wild 2 in January 2004. Stardust will return to Earth with both cometary and interstellar dust particle samples in January 2006.

NASA's Genesis mission was designed to collect solar wind samples. The spacecraft was launched in August of 2001 and collected particles coming off the sun. The samples were returned to Earth in September 2004 and complex laboratory analysis is attempting now to recover from its unexpected hard-landing.

Japan's MUSES-C spacecraft, launched May 2003, is headed for asteroid 1998 SF36. After its arrival in June 2005, the spacecraft will gather up to one gram of material from a variety of sites on the asteroid. The samples are expected to arrive back on Earth by June 2007.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


SMART-1 Completes Its First Orbit Around The Moon
Paris (ESA) Nov 22, 2004
Last Friday (November 19) at 10:58 UTC, SMART-1 passed its second perilune and successfully completed its first orbit around the Moon. The first orbit started on 15 November at 17:47 UTC when SMART-1 passed its first perilune.







  • First Space Council To Set Course Towards A European Space Program
  • NASA Selects Exploration Systems Proposals
  • NASA Gets Back Into The Rocket Science Game
  • European Space Industry To Develop Re-Entry Vehicles

  • Three Hundred Sols And Counting
  • Coprates Catena's 'Collapsed' Structures
  • Living Large In A Martian Lava Tube
  • Water From A Stone

  • Brazil, Russia Sign Pact On Space Cooperation
  • Launch Of Ariane Heavy Put Back To January 2005
  • AMC-16 Satellite Good To Go For December 16 Launch
  • New Soyuz Model Successfully Launched

  • Space Sentinels Track Desertification On Mediterranean Shores
  • NASA Research Shows Wetland Changes Affect Florida Freezes
  • NASA Satellite Data To Aid Global Conservation
  • Riders On The Storm

  • Latest Adaptive Optic Images Of Uranus Surpass Hubble
  • Keck Telescope Images Of Uranus Reveal Ring, Atmospheric Fireworks
  • Pluto-Spitzer Astronomers Say KBO's May Be Smaller Than Thought
  • Keck Zooms In On The Weird Weather Of Uranus

  • Russia May Have Moon Base By 2025
  • China To Accomplish Lunar Probe Program In 13 Years: Scientist
  • Apollo 12 Remembered - Lunar Germ Colony Or Lab Anomaly?
  • SMART-1 Completes Its First Orbit Around The Moon

  • An "Ocean" Rendezvous On A Bone Dry Moon
  • Europe Reaches The Moon
  • Lunar Mini-Camera Tells The Moon To Say "Cheese"
  • Europe's Smart-1 Ready For Lunar Capture Nov 15

  • Symmetricom Mark V Granted Security Approval By The NAVSTAR GPS Joint Program Office
  • Raytheon Awarded Phase 1 Of Next-Gen Indian Civil Navigation System
  • GPS Gives Howitzers A New Lease On Life
  • Navicom GPS Offers New Fight Back Anti-Theft Program For Cadillacs

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement