THE FIRST ANIMALS IN SPACE
G'day folks,
Ever wondered about animals going into space? Check this out ...
Though far
less famous than later non-human astronauts, the first animals in space were a
group of fruit flies, launched to an altitude of 42 miles at the tip of a
Nazi-designed V-2 rocket by American military scientists on February 20, 1947.
The flies, members of the often-studied species Drosophila melanogaster, made
their journey alongside packets of rye and cotton seeds as part of an
experiment to study the effects of cosmic rays on living organisms. The flies’
container parachuted to the ground and the insects were retrieved in perfect
health.
The first
vertebrates sent into space were a series of ill-fated monkeys and mice
launched between 1948 and 1951 by American researchers. On June 14, 1949, a
Rhesus monkey named Albert II blasted to an altitude of 83 miles in a V-2,
surviving the flight but dying on impact. A year later, the U.S. launched a
mouse and photographed its behavior in a weightless state, although it too was
not recovered alive.
The Soviet
Union had better luck, launching (to 62 miles) and recovering a pair of dogs,
Tsygan and Dezik, on July 22, 1951. Two months later, the U.S. launched and
retrieved an anesthetized monkey named Yorick along with 11 mice. Alas, poor
Yorick died after his capsule overheated in the New Mexico sun while awaiting
recovery, though nine of the mice survived. Six years later the Soviet Sputnik
II probe carried the first animal into orbit, a former stray dog named
Kudryavka (“curly”) but later known to the world as Laika (“barker”). She died
in her orbiting capsule—no provisions had been made to return her to earth
alive—sparking debate in the West over the ethics of sacrificing animals to
advance science.
In 1960, the
Soviet’ Sputnik 5, carrying two dogs as part of its animal-laden cargo, was
successfully recovered after orbit. The following year, despite Cold War
tensions, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev gave the puppy of one of Sputnik 5’s
dogs to young Caroline Kennedy. Pushinka, as she was known, eventually gave
birth to four puppies of her own, which President John F. Kennedy referred to
as the “pupniks.”
Clancy's comment: Mm ... I've never been interested in space travel. The amount of money spent on it is obscene, when you consider the issues that need to be fixed here on earth. Sending animals into space is not acceptable either.
I'm ...
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