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'Lunar Ark' Proposed In Case Of Deadly Impact On Earth
National Geographic ^ | 8-14-2007 | Kevin Holden Platt

Posted on 08/16/2007 2:57:05 PM PDT by blam

'Lunar Ark' Proposed in Case of Deadly Impact on Earth

Kevin Holden Platt
for National Geographic News

August 14, 2007

The moon should be developed as a sanctuary for civilization in case of a cataclysmic cosmic impact, according to an international team of experts.

NASA already has blueprints to create a permanent lunar outpost by the 2020s. (Read: "Moon Base Announced by NASA" [December 4, 2006].)

But that plan should be expanded to include a way to preserve humanity's learning, culture, and technology if Earth is hit by a doomsday asteroid or comet, said Jim Burke of International Space University (ISU) in France.

Burke, once a project manager on some of the earliest American lunar landings, now heads an ISU study on surviving a collision with a near-Earth object.

An impact of the size that wiped out the dinosaurs hasn't happened since long before the rise of humans, he pointed out.

Yet scientists' expanding knowledge of asteroids and craters left throughout the solar system has created a consensus that Earth remains vulnerable to a civilization-crushing collision.

This calls for the creation of a space age Noah's ark, Burke said.

Lunar Ark

Humans are just beginning to send trinkets of technology and culture into space. NASA's recently launched Phoenix Mars Lander, for example, carries a mini-disc inscribed with stories, art, and music about Mars.

The Phoenix lander is a "precursor mission" in a decades-long project to transplant the essentials of humanity onto the moon and eventually Mars. (See a photo gallery about the Phoenix mission.)

The International Space University team is now on a more ambitious mission: to start building a "lunar biological and historical archive," initially through robotic landings on the moon.

Laying the foundation for "rebuilding the terrestrial Internet, plus an Earth-moon extension of it, should be a priority," Burke said. The founders of the group Alliance to Rescue Civilization (ARC) agreed that extending the Internet from the Earth to the moon could help avert a technological dark age following "nuclear war, acts of terrorism, plague, or asteroid collisions." (Read: "Killer Asteroids: A Real But Remote Risk?" [June 19, 2003].)

But the group also advocates creating a moon-based repository of Earth's life, complete with human-staffed facilities to "preserve backups of scientific and cultural achievements and of the species important to our civilization," said ARC's Robert Shapiro, a biochemist at New York University.

"In the event of a global catastrophe, the ARC facilities will be prepared to reintroduce lost technology, art, history, crops, livestock, and, if necessary, even human beings to the Earth," Shapiro said.

ARC hopes to finance the planned moon outpost into a lunar ark of recovery in part through donations from billionaire philanthropists.

"The establishment of an ARC sanctuary would for the first time provide a compelling purpose for the colonization of space."

If the international lunar outpost of the 2020s expands into a colony and then a city, "it is possible that a whole new phase in civilization may develop—the branching of history into one stream on Earth and another on the moon," ISU's Burke added. (Read: "NASA Aims to Open Moon for Business" [July 25, 2006].)

This "dual-world expansion" could be within reach by the end of this century, he said.

"Look at the last century, when we went from the Wright brothers to the Apollo missions—along with man's great expansion of his understanding of the cosmos."

Plan B?

Kilian Engel, an instructor at the International Space University who is involved in post-doomsday research, said the lunar archive is actually Plan B.

"Plan A involves creating an international network of astronomers to scan space for asteroids and comets that might threaten Earth, a global task force to formulate a strategy to prevent impacts with the planet, and a new generation of spacecraft to carry out these missions," Engel said.

More awareness of the danger posed by asteroids and comets is now spreading across the United States and the world.

In 2005 Congress directed NASA to figure out how to survey space for threatening near-Earth objects, as well as how to develop spacecraft to deflect or shoot them out of space.

Yet NASA receives less than five million U.S. dollars per year to conduct this "Spaceguard Survey," which is aimed at finding near-Earth objects greater than 0.62 mile (a kilometer) in diameter.

NASA has reviewed options that range from building titanic space tugboats to nudge asteroids off a collision course with Earth to crashing "kinectic impactors" into an oncoming comet. (Related: "'Killer Asteroid' Debate Pits Gravity Tractors Against Bombs, Projectiles" [March 8, 2007].)

Nuke Option

In March 2007 researchers at NASA's Near-Earth Object Program released a report that said nuclear explosions are ten to a hundred times more effective in diverting killer asteroids than non-nuclear alternatives.

Even so, "30 to 80 percent of potentially hazardous near-Earth objects are in orbits that are beyond the capability of current or planned launch systems," the report said.

And even if NASA eventually develops a nuclear-tipped, anti-asteroid launch vehicle, rocketing hydrogen bombs into space "is prohibited by the Outer Space Treaty of 1967," ISU's Burke said.

That UN-brokered treaty prohibits the deployment of nuclear weapons in Earth orbit, in outer space, or on any other celestial body.

Yet as astronomers across the globe piece together predictions on potential asteroids of mass destruction, UN members could vote to amend the space treaty to prepare a nuclear response to such threats.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ark; catastrophism; impact; lunar; lunarimpact; moon; themoon
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How many have wondered if maybe we haven't already done this once in the ancient past?
1 posted on 08/16/2007 2:57:08 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

2 posted on 08/16/2007 2:58:28 PM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: blam
This calls for the creation of a space age Noah's ark, Burke said.

The difference, of course, is that this federally-funded project will place two gay men on the ark to meet its diversity quota.

3 posted on 08/16/2007 3:00:20 PM PDT by NittanyLion
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To: blam
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
4 posted on 08/16/2007 3:02:01 PM PDT by rfp1234 (Nothing is better than eternal happiness. A ham sandwich is better than nothing. Therefore...)
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To: NittanyLion

LOL!


5 posted on 08/16/2007 3:02:02 PM PDT by saganite (Billions and billions and billions----and that's just the NASA budget!)
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To: blam

6 posted on 08/16/2007 3:03:14 PM PDT by Red Badger (All I know about Minnesota, I learned from Garrison Keilor..................)
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To: Red Badger

Eagle One to Alpha...


7 posted on 08/16/2007 3:04:40 PM PDT by mgstarr
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To: blam

8 posted on 08/16/2007 3:05:22 PM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: blam

NASA has reviewed options that range from building titanic space tugboats to nudge asteroids off a collision course with Earth to crashing “kinectic impactors” into an oncoming comet.
-
may not work as most asteroids are apparently flying rock piles held together by gravity and/or ice.


9 posted on 08/16/2007 3:05:39 PM PDT by ari-freedom (I am for traditional moral values, a strong national defense, and free markets.)
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To: mgstarr

Come in Eagle one......

10 posted on 08/16/2007 3:06:29 PM PDT by Red Badger (All I know about Minnesota, I learned from Garrison Keilor..................)
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To: blam
"preserve backups of scientific and cultural achievements and of the species important to our civilization,"Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
11 posted on 08/16/2007 3:06:38 PM PDT by rfp1234 (Nothing is better than eternal happiness. A ham sandwich is better than nothing. Therefore...)
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To: blam
"It vould not be difficult, mein Fuehrer! ... Heh, heh ... I mean, Mr. President."
12 posted on 08/16/2007 3:08:16 PM PDT by Mr Ramsbotham (Laws against sodomy are honored in the breech.)
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To: blam

I certainly believe we have done this several times over.


13 posted on 08/16/2007 3:09:06 PM PDT by Siobhan (An official opponent of the Union of North America)
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To: blam

I think the Bhagavata Purana and some of the other Sanskrit scriptures make this likely, blam. In the Hebrew Scriptures it is written in Qoheleth (Ecclesiastes 1:9) “That which has been is that which will be, And that which has been done is that which will be done. So there is nothing new under the sun.” I have taken that particular Hebrew writing as a touchstone for interpreting the world and the myth of progress as currently embraced.


14 posted on 08/16/2007 3:13:31 PM PDT by Siobhan (An official opponent of the Union of North America)
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To: blam
In March 2007 researchers at NASA's Near-Earth Object Program released a report that said nuclear explosions are ten to a hundred times more effective in diverting killer asteroids than non-nuclear alternatives.

Even so, "30 to 80 percent of potentially hazardous near-Earth objects are in orbits that are beyond the capability of current or planned launch systems," the report said.

And even if NASA eventually develops a nuclear-tipped, anti-asteroid launch vehicle, rocketing hydrogen bombs into space "is prohibited by the Outer Space Treaty of 1967," ISU's Burke said.

That UN-brokered treaty prohibits the deployment of nuclear weapons in Earth orbit, in outer space, or on any other celestial body.


Quite frankly, the threat of annihilation by a meteor or comet strike is more real than the threat of our civilization crumbling under global warming - we know that such strikes have caused mass extinctions on the earth before. The US should be developing the monitoring, missile and nuclear weapons technology needed to prevent this threat. And screw the UN.
15 posted on 08/16/2007 3:14:59 PM PDT by AnotherUnixGeek
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To: blam
An arc ~ a repository, maybe even a self-repairing mass data storage device ~ Has this been done before?

Hexgon on Saturn: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1807602/posts

Saturn Rings Have Atmosphere: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1869570/posts

DNA Shaped Dust In Saturn's Rings?: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1879563/posts

16 posted on 08/16/2007 3:22:48 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: AnotherUnixGeek
Late Pleostocene Human Population Bottlenecks. . . (Toba)

"The six year long volcanic winter and 1000-year-long instant Ice Age that followed Mount Toba's eruption may have decimated Modern Man's entire population. Genetic evidence suggests that Human population size fell to about 10,000 adults between 50 and 100 thousand years ago. The survivors from this global catastrophy would have found refuge in isolated tropical pockets, mainly in Equatorial Africa. Populations living in Europe and northern China would have been completely eliminated by the reduction of the summer temperatures by as much as 12 degrees centigrade.

17 posted on 08/16/2007 3:24:52 PM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: blam
But that plan should be expanded to include a way to preserve humanity's learning, culture, and technology if Earth is hit by a doomsday asteroid or comet, said Jim Burke of International Space University (ISU) in France.

About the only technology we will need for a while is how to make more humans to replace those left behind. We've pretty much perfected that process and it does NOT include two astronauts named Adam & Steve!

18 posted on 08/16/2007 3:28:31 PM PDT by Knute (Tell me again ONE good reason I'm living here in Wisconsin??)
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To: Red Badger

I remembered watching that as a kid, cool at the time. Watch it today, it is a peek into the culture of the 1970’s even the 1960’s with the psychedelic planets with references to drugs, hair styles and clothes.


19 posted on 08/16/2007 3:32:42 PM PDT by CORedneck
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To: CORedneck

I watched it as a college age guy and I thought it was cool.......at the time............


20 posted on 08/16/2007 3:35:51 PM PDT by Red Badger (All I know about Minnesota, I learned from Garrison Keilor..................)
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