Scientific American - 11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
22 Scientific American, November 2019

NASA

ADVANCES


SPACE ARCHAEOLOGY

History


in Orbit


Space junk documents humanity’s
expansion into new frontiers

The word “archaeology” typically brings
to mind crumbling ruins from ancient
civilizations—not gleaming rocket ships
or high-tech spacecraft. But more than
60 years of space missions have scattered
countless artifacts throughout Earth orbit
and across the solar system, creating a his-
toric legacy of exploration for current and
future generations. Alice Gorman, a re -
searcher at Flinders University in Adelaide,
Australia, is one of a few pioneering “space
archaeologists” studying the Space Age.
She is also the author of a new book,
Dr Space Junk vs the Universe: Archaeology
and the Future (MIT Press, 2019).
Scientific AmericAn spoke with Gorman
about assessing the cultural significance of
orbital debris and how to preserve space
artifacts as a heritage for all humankind.
An edited excerpt follows. —Lee Billings

What is “space archaeology?”
Space archaeology uses the physical mate-
rial and the places associated with space

exploration to learn about the human be-
haviors behind them. So this covers infra-
structure on Earth, objects in Earth orbit
and even sites on other worlds. The Apollo
lunar landing areas are good examples—
to me, those are archaeological sites. And
that feeds into the related concept of
“space heritage,” which assigns different
categories of significance—historical, aes-
thetic, social, spiritual and scientific—to
certain artifacts and sites for past, present
or future generations. Much of my work
involves gathering the information to help
make those judgments.

You’re sometimes called Dr. Space
Junk, but I get the sense you don’t
actually like the term.
That’s right. Even though I strongly identify
with that persona, the term “space junk”
is problematic. From an archaeological per-

GEOLOGY

Birth of


the Sahara


Dust on nearby islands hides
secrets of the desert’s origins

The Sahara is the world’s largest and
most legendary subtropical desert, but
knowledge about it is surprisingly limited.
Even estimates of when it formed vary
widely, from more than five million years
ago to mere thousands. Now, however,
geologists studying wind-carried Saharan
dust on the Canary Islands have come
closer to pinning this down: it is, they
report, close to five million years old.
One reason for the uncertainty over
the Sahara’s age is that researchers use
such different methods to estimate it;

these include studying desert dust found
in sediment under the Atlantic Ocean,
analyzing sandstone and modeling the
ancient climate. To help settle things,
geomorphologist Daniel Muhs of the U.S.
Geological Survey (lead author on the
new research) and his colleagues looked
at sediment on Spain’s Fuerteventura and
Gran Canaria islands, where they found
evidence of Saharan dust. The dust ap -
peared in ancient soil layers, whose age
they assessed on the basis of fossils found
in the same layers—and that age agreed
with earlier marine sediment studies.
The researchers reported their finding
in November in Palaeogeography, Palaeo­
climatology, Palaeoecology.
“The conclusion of the study is very
good,” says Zhongshi Zhang, a climate
modeler at the University of Bergen in
Norway, who was not involved in the
work. Because the dust found on the

After two years on the moon, Surveyor 3
has visitors from the Apollo 12 mission.

© 2019 Scientific American

22 Scientific American, November 2019

NASA

ADVANCES


SPACE ARCHAEOLOGY

History


in Orbit


Space junk documents humanity’s
expansion into new frontiers

The word “archaeology” typically brings
to mind crumbling ruins from ancient
civilizations—not gleaming rocket ships
or high-tech spacecraft. But more than
60 years of space missions have scattered
countless artifacts throughout Earth orbit
and across the solar system, creating a his-
toric legacy of exploration for current and
future generations. Alice Gorman, a re -
searcher at Flinders University in Adelaide,
Australia, is one of a few pioneering “space
archaeologists” studying the Space Age.
She is also the author of a new book,
Dr Space Junk vs the Universe: Archaeology
and the Future (MIT Press, 2019).
Scientific AmericAn spoke with Gorman
about assessing the cultural significance of
orbital debris and how to preserve space
artifacts as a heritage for all humankind.
An edited excerpt follows. —Lee Billings

What is “space archaeology?”
Space archaeology uses the physical mate-
rial and the places associated with space

exploration to learn about the human be-
haviors behind them. So this covers infra-
structure on Earth, objects in Earth orbit
and even sites on other worlds. The Apollo
lunar landing areas are good examples—
to me, those are archaeological sites. And
that feeds into the related concept of
“space heritage,” which assigns different
categories of significance—historical, aes-
thetic, social, spiritual and scientific—to
certain artifacts and sites for past, present
or future generations. Much of my work
involves gathering the information to help
make those judgments.

You’re sometimes called Dr. Space
Junk, but I get the sense you don’t
actually like the term.
That’s right. Even though I strongly identify
with that persona, the term “space junk”
is problematic. From an archaeological per-

GEOLOGY

Birth of


the Sahara


Dust on nearby islands hides
secrets of the desert’s origins

The Sahara is the world’s largest and
most legendary subtropical desert, but
knowledge about it is surprisingly limited.
Even estimates of when it formed vary
widely, from more than five million years
ago to mere thousands. Now, however,
geologists studying wind-carried Saharan
dust on the Canary Islands have come
closer to pinning this down: it is, they
report, close to five million years old.
One reason for the uncertainty over
the Sahara’s age is that researchers use
such different methods to estimate it;

these include studying desert dust found
in sediment under the Atlantic Ocean,
analyzing sandstone and modeling the
ancient climate. To help settle things,
geomorphologist Daniel Muhs of the U.S.
Geological Survey (lead author on the
new research) and his colleagues looked
at sediment on Spain’s Fuerteventura and
Gran Canaria islands, where they found
evidence of Saharan dust. The dust ap -
peared in ancient soil layers, whose age
they assessed on the basis of fossils found
in the same layers—and that age agreed
with earlier marine sediment studies.
The researchers reported their finding
in November in Palaeogeography, Palaeo­
climatology, Palaeoecology.
“The conclusion of the study is very
good,” says Zhongshi Zhang, a climate
modeler at the University of Bergen in
Norway, who was not involved in the
work. Because the dust found on the

After two years on the moon, Surveyor 3
has visitors from the Apollo 12 mission.

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