Who owns historic moon-dust-eating cockroaches and the contents of their stomachs?
A dispute involving NASA and a space memorabilia collector over the ownership of cockroach-digested moon dust has resulted in the cancellation of a scheduled auction of the moon dust and three dead bugs.
The artifacts were part of an unusual experiment involving a cockroach expert from the University of Minnesota.
In 1969, NASA fed cockroaches moon dust gathered by Apollo 11, the first landing of humans on the moon. The space agency wanted Marion Brooks-Wallace, a university entomology professor, to see if the cockroaches came to any harm from disease-causing space microorganisms.
The bugs were just fine — aside from the fact that they had to be killed to be dissected.
When the cockroaches were taken to Brooks-Wallace's lab, it marked the first time material recovered from the moon mission landed in Minnesota. "First Lunar Soil Was Brought to Cities in Dead Cockroaches," was how the headline in an Oct. 6, 1969, Minneapolis Tribune story put it.
Brooks-Wallace saved a pinch of the moon dust recovered from bellies of the cockroaches, three of the dead bugs and glass slides containing samples from experimental bugs meant to be viewed under a microscope. She died in 2007 at age 89. About three years later, her family reportedly sold the moon dust/cockroach artifacts at auction for $10,000.
Recently the current owner of the materials decided to put the artifacts up for auction again. RR Auction said it expected bidding to reach up to $400,000 when live bidding concluded on June 23 in Boston.