But isn't the moon a barren wasteland, where NO LIFE WHATSOEVER can survive? Not even single cell organisms could survive? Even if there was some kind of dangerous microbe there at one stage that was perserved somehow, frozen maybe, wouldn't the lack of atmosphere, lethal temperature fluctuations and constant solar radiation (particularly the last one) render them unrevivable?Ultratwinkie said:They take this stuff pretty seriously because of that fact. Its very dangerous to the unsuspecting. It could have led to a plague, with no guarantee we could cure it. This is why they seal the rocks away in labs or museums, they cant be allowed to be in open air. This is also why moon rocks are illegal to have, and far more illegal to sell.THEJORRRG said:Oh! Wow, that's actually pretty serious. I thought she was in trouble for theft, not accidentally threatening us with xeno-plague.Ultratwinkie said:Any material gained off of earth is illegal unless its in a government lab. This is because of an early space exploration legislation in the 60-70s that banned its sale. The governments feared that alien material may contain germs which would potentially effect our environment or start a xeno plague.THEJORRRG said:If its her property, where's the crime?
Just ask Armstrong. His answer basically determines everything, doesn't it?
The law was never taken out of effect, and quickly forgotten about by the time the space race hysteria ended. Its a controlled substance just like selling uranium is frowned upon. Moon dirt is also dangerous if not handled properly. If you spill it and inhale it, its the same as inhaling particles of shattered glass. It can and will hurt your lungs and possibly eyes.
I'm not some kind of world-class astronomer or anything like that, but that explaination doesn't fly with me. Could an alien microbe pose a threat to us/our planet? Maybe; but I don't see how such a microbe could come from the moon of all places.