ESA's Scientist Suggests A Noah's Ark On the Moon 102
13.7BillionYears writes "Many are familiar with a supermarket tabloid (whose name eludes me) offering ridiculous headlines, one of the most famous being 'Noah's Ark Found on the Moon!' In an ironic twist, that one may yet come to pass. The BBC reports that the European Space Agency's chief scientist, Dr. Bernard Foing, has said that there should be a Noah's Ark on the Moon consisting of a repository for the DNA of every single species of plant and animal, in case the Earth is destroyed by an asteroid or nuclear holocaust. One wonders how you'd go about indexing every life form including undiscovered species and how you'd protect the DNA from radiation."
Ob Biblical (Score:4, Funny)
Two-by-two, of course!
Re:Ob Biblical (Score:2)
how you'd protect the DNA from radiation... (Score:2)
Re:how you'd protect the DNA from radiation... (Score:2)
Re:how you'd protect the DNA from radiation... (Score:2, Informative)
It's not the worst idea (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It's not the worst idea (Score:2)
Re:It's not the worst idea (Score:5, Funny)
Unless they're like us!
Jurassic Park 4, anyone? Aliens setup a park to show an extinct race, but when the power fails, the extinct race starts climbing over the walls and killing... each other! 4 billion years in the making!
Of course, they could probably just load the DNA into Random ET Super Computer, hit the "Go" button, and watch it all unfold in a computer simulation with x number of outcomes. Hmm.
Re:It's not the worst idea (Score:1)
Re:It's not the worst idea (Score:2)
DNA is not life; it is just one particularly complex part of it.
Wow!!! (Score:5, Funny)
ESA (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:ESA (Score:2)
And what about Japan's adventures in space? Apparently they have a sample return mission en route to the asteroid Itokawa. It's highly interesting because it is a sample return and because it's using an
Terrestrial sites? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Terrestrial sites? (Score:2)
Re:Terrestrial sites? (Score:1)
Need something like this soon (Score:2, Interesting)
The next ice age (or whatever you call it when the glaciers are coming, because we've been in an 'ice age' for the past 2-1/2 million years) has been modeled to be in full swing by 2900. Unlike the last one, which lasted a mere 20,000 years, you can bet the Yellowstone supervolcano will go off and deepen this one, and maybe it'll last 100,000 years or more.
In the next 80-150 years, due to global warming, the carrying capacity of the earth is going to be drastically
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:1)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:1)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:1, Funny)
Really, man. I've got a bucket o' DNA right next to my porn collection. Trust me, it's not doing anybody any good.
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:1)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:1)
>
Could you be a little less self-contradictory in your disaster scenarios?
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2)
an end to exit of the ice age we are in and a return to the depths of a new a longer lasting ice age.
Global Warming is not exactly a good name, it should be called "fucking our environment up" or something more accurate.
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:2)
Re:Need something like this soon (Score:1)
Not far enough out (Score:1)
Even if we do have some kind of ark, what would be the point, if we don't know that anyone will be along to use the material, or any place to put it?
The article quotes the scientist saying that we could repopulate the earth after an event of this magnitude, but I don't think he's
Re:Not far enough out (Score:1)
Re:Not far enough out (Score:2)
Re:Not far enough out (Score:1)
According to our current understanding of Astrophysics, the Sun will not be going supernova.
This Wikipedia article [wikipedia.org] seems to indicate the sun would need to be >12 solar masses to form a Type II Supernova (with Type 1 only being possible with a companion star).
This page [nasa.gov] from NASA's website claims the lower limit is 8 solar masses.
Point is, we don't need to worry about the sun going
Re:Not far enough out (Score:2)
Re:Not far enough out (Score:1)
There is a large enough risk that it could blow up in the atmosphere (same fear that some people have over nuclear powered satellites, but it is much more realistic of a danger) or that it could reach space but reenter earth or some other planet.
Using something like a space ladder would be great, because if something went wrong, the radiation wouldn't be released in an
Re:Not far enough out (Score:2)
Re:Not far enough out (Score:1)
But really, I wish we could just shoot it all into the sun and use nuclear power instead of oil, coal, wood, etc.
Re:Not far enough out (Score:2)
Shoot, that's the real keyword isn't it? Can't use a rocket- too damn finicky. But fire it out of a rail gun heading Ea
Re:Not far enough out (Score:1)
It is believed that by dropping enough limestone, the atmosphere can be broken up. I think it has something to do with reacting with the CO2. With the CO2 absorbed and the clouds dissipated, the temperature would hopefully drop to a much more hospitable range (no more greenhouse effect). The entire process would take a very long time.
I have also heard theories about using certain plants/bacteria in place of/in conjunction wit
Re:Not far enough out (Score:2)
If we don't put it there, then they definatly can't use it.
Re:Not far enough out (Score:1)
I was born a thousand years too early/have read too many science fiction books... It would be a dream to go on such a trip... sigh... If the world could just be a little more like Songs of Distant Earth (after they got out there, that is, not while the solar system was going to hell...
Yeah, well... (Score:2)
I hope he also suggested a way for growing money on trees.
Elephants supposedly eat about 400 pounds of food per day. Anyone want to calculate the annual cost of merely keeping a pair of elephants fed? Let alone the initial transport and the construction of their pen?
Ooo! Me! Me! (Score:2)
One wonders how you'd go about indexing every life form including undiscovered species...
Step one: discover all the undiscovered species.
Step two: index every life form by eye color.
Simple enough. Pshh, I can't believe I have to lay all this out for you.
Re:Ooo! Me! Me! (Score:1)
Step Three:
Step Four: Profit!
Simple (Score:2)
We Need Another Timmy! (Score:2)
Do your best (Score:1)
I think I'll go drink a soda... but how can I drink the molecules that evaporate? or stick to the lining of the can?
One wonders how you'd go about drinking every drop of soda incuding evaporates and how you'd clean the inside lining.
You do the best you can, jackass. /. so they went and made everybody read
That may be one of the dumbest, most smartass trolls I've seen on
Re:Do your best (Score:2)
No kidding. Too much coffee or not enough. Oh, I hear lead works pretty well for that radiation thing. (Your Mitochondria May Vary)
Re:Do your best (Score:1)
You live your life your way, I'll live my life my way.
My guess is.. (Score:4, Funny)
Think again Docta Foing!!
(wow that's fun to say out loud)
Surely too close? (Score:1)
Protect it from Radiation (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Protect it from Radiation (Score:1)
Low-cost indexing method (Score:3, Funny)
Anna Kournikova & I (Score:4, Funny)
Not Thinking Big Enough (Score:2)
Re:Not Thinking Big Enough (Score:2)
Terraforming Mars will take at least hundreds and probably thousands of years. I'm all for terraforming Mars but you've got to admit, the ark plan has a bit mor
tcejbuS (Score:2)
How useful is DNA, really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Until bringing back the Dodo and the Passenger Pigeon becomes feasible, I fail to see how sending DNA from every animal to the moon is any better a way to spend research money than sending a box full of the covers to every O'Reilly book ever publshed tot he moon.
How many fucktons in a metric shitload? (Score:1)
The same way that a human habitat on the moon would be protected. A metric shitload of rock.
DNA might already be there (Score:1)
Remember those stories about finding lunar and martian rocks down in Anartica? Those come by a process called interplanetary transfer.
When an impact happens on a body, the crash sends debris up, sometimes with enough force to exit the gravitational pull of the planet. Through interplanetary transfer, that debris may land on the Earth, or really anywhere else in the solar system.
The process also works in reverse, if the Earth was struck by a large meteorite, debris would fly up and exit the Earths gravita
Actually, there's another factor involved... (Score:2)
If there is a chance that bacteria from Mars can land on the Earth, then there is a chance that bacteria from the Earth could land on Mars. DNA is a little bit of a stretch, but with the scales and timeframs you work with in Astronomy, it is possible.
Actually, it's the gravitation pull of the Sun that allows material from Mars to reach Earth. For Earth material to reach Mars it would have to travel against the pull of the Sun, which it can't do without propulsion.
I would think inter-solar transfers w
Re:Actually, there's another factor involved... (Score:1)
They really dont need acceleration during the transfer, they just need a great enough inital velocity to escape. If its not great enough, your right, theres not much of a chance of it getting out to a further orbit.
I am not sure if this would have any effect, but what about if its initial orbit was highly elliptical, and it used a type of 'sling-shot' boost off the sun or an inner planet?
Re:Actually, there's another factor involved... (Score:2)
Re:Actually, there's another factor involved... (Score:1)
Thanks, very insightful... (too bad I can't mod it up
But how do those microbes computed the orbit ? (j/k)
We need populations, not just genomes (Score:5, Insightful)
There've been recent articles that indicate that climate change is causing an overall loss in diversity among the world's species. Once the diversity decreases to a certain point, the populations will crash (I've read about computer simulations done on Atlantic salmon populations that bear this out.) In short, simply saving the DNA, either the actual molecules or a printout, will not do anyone any good in the future. Not only will it be impossible to resurrect the species, they future researchers will have only the very limited insight into just one example of a creature that once numbered in the thousands, millions, or billions with the genetic diverity to match.
The project, conceived this way at least, is doomed to failure. The best way to preserve what we've got is to reduce the threat of mass extinction with proper management of the planet we have now.
why bother? (Score:2)
And it "they" did discover it, why should they consider us so special as to be worth regeneration?
For that matter, why should they consider it SAFE to regenerate us?
"Good riddance!" I say; let them regenerate everything except the primates.
Why? (Score:2)
It's very egocentric to think that millions of years later some alien race would want to resurrect the creatures of a planet that was destroyed.
Work on this project has already started. (Score:2, Offtopic)
Craig Venter (yes, the Craig Venter of Celera/Human Genome fame) is undertaking a mission to do just that - catalog every species on earth's DNA. He's starting with the largely under-explored ocean species.
Here's the Wired News article about it [wired.com].
On the Moon? (Score:3, Interesting)
Say the Earth is destroyed or afflicted by one of the things mentioned, then WHO is going to take advantage of that repository?
Say somehow some people survive. The next question is HOW are they going to use that to rebuild?
Interesting idea but I think just a *little* bit early for its time
A
P.S.: If the Sun goes then that was pointless anyway. I say make it hang-out a nova-safe distance somewhere in space
Why? (Score:3, Informative)
I found his speaking style engaging and intelligent, and his theories to be enlightening. You each owe it to yourself to read an interview with him [singularitywatch.com], which he gave out copies of to participants in the talks at the camp.
The interview details his theory on the whys and hows of what has been termed "the coming technological singularity". Transhumanists here will know what I speak of - all others, please look into it - google is your friend.
One of the ideas presented in the above interview referenced, John Smart lays out the idea that natural disasters do little to impeded evolutionary development, in fact, he contends that such disasters cause leaps in development:
from the above interview
"Catastrophes are to be expected, and they accelerate change whenever immune systems learn from them. In my own research, there has never been a catastrophe in known universal history (supernova, KT-meteorite, plague, civilization collapse, nuclear detonation, reactor meltdown, computer virus, 9/11, you name it) that did not function to accelerate the average distributed complexity (ADC) of the computational network in which it was embedded." - John Smart
The ideas and theory he sets forth in the above interview make a lot of sense. He does, however, always hold that it is a theory, and may be wrong - several times during his talks at Burning Man he was adament in stating this. However, I think his ideas highlight and explain certain domains within the idea of a technological singularity in a logical and consistent manner.
Please note that I am open to debate on this entire issue. If anyone can offer me detailed analysis or references to papers or writings regarding the unlikelyness or impossibility of a technological singularity occurring, I am all ears, so to speak. I want to hear the other side of the story, from the dissenters. All of it is fascinating, but it is hard to determine what the likelyhood of any of it is if you have only heard one side...
Re:Why? (Score:2)
my 2
Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
A little lesson for you sonny, Jim: (Score:2)
um. (Score:2)
Don't laugh... (Score:4, Funny)
Call it Tyco Station... (Score:1)
Re:Call it Tyco Station... (Score:1)
tricky prospect. More than once, ISTR. But it eventually got (re)done
and humanity developed to the point of space flight again yadda yadda and
they all lived happily ever after, the end.
Space and survival: links (Score:3, Informative)
CNN is also covering the story [cnn.com].
More information:
The relationship between space and survival [wikipedia.org] has been expressed by many others [spacequotes.com], such as Carl Sagan [daviddarling.info], Stephen Hawking [telegraph.co.uk], Martin Rees [issues.org], William Burrows [arc-space.org] and Robert Shapiro [edge.org].
It's a colony; not just an ark (Score:2)
The CNN article [cnn.com] quotes Dr. Bernard Foing talking about a permanent, manned lunar colony with a tissue/DNA repository:
easy DNA source (Score:1)
Alternatively, we could just send my bedsheets up there.