Police moonstruck by latest protection case
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Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT BEACH -- They have guarded presidential limousines in their
garage and stored automatic weapons for the Secret Service in their
armory.
But moon rocks?
Those have never found their way into the Newport Beach Police
Department, Chief Bob McDonell said.
At least not until last week when Austyn Fudge and Margaret
Buckingham, volunteers at the local Environmental Nature Center, arrived
nervously at the department’s front desk with two shining silver boxes
that each bore the inscription: “If found return to NASA.”
In one of those boxes were tiny samples of dust and rock scraped off
the moon and embedded in a Lucite disk and ensconced in another disk were
pieces of meteorites.
Both samples were on loan from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to the
Environmental Nature Center and will be displayed for the first time in
Newport Beach on Wednesday at the center at a special Storytime Space
Night.
“But until then, we were told the samples must be in a very, very safe
place,” Buckingham said.
So right after they secured the boxes from JPL, they drove to the
Newport Beach Police Department to ask the chief if his department would
guard the rocks for them.
“It was a strange request,” said McDonell, who agreed to store them in
his own office safe box.
The samples sparked the interest of several officers in the
department, the chief said.
“When officers started hearing about it, some of them came up to me
and asked if they could see it,” he said. “These things are really very
interesting.”
Indeed they are. One of the disks, which contains the moon rocks, has
six samples collected from the moon on two different missions, in 1971
and 1972, which was the last visit to the moon by humans.
The disk has basalt, a black rock collected from the upper part of the
moon; a sample of breccia, which was cast out of a lunar crater during
its formation by meteor impact; highland soil and anorthosite, scraped
off the center of the moon; mare soil obtained by sieving a portion of
basalt; and orange soil that the astronauts secured at the southeast side
of the moon.
Three volunteers from the center were given the lunar disks after they
went through a two-hour orientation program in which they learned about
the disks and how to protect them, Buckingham said.
She said only two of 200 of these disks has been lost. One was stolen
from a NASA vehicle and another lost in the mail.
“These cost only $100 to make,” she said. “But their implicit value
cannot be measured.”
This is the first time these samples will be publicly exhibited for
the benefit of the Newport-Mesa community, Fudge said.
“Seeing a piece of the moon gets students excited about astronomy and
science because it’s tangible,” she said.
It is also thrilling for adults, Buckingham said. More so for those
who have watched Neil Armstrong take his first step on the moon,
Buckingham said.
“It’s special,” she said. “There’s such a magical feeling to it.”
FYI
The lunar disks will be on display at the Environmental Nature Center
from 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday as part of Storytime Space Night. The event
will feature stories, activities for families and readings by special
guest Mary Letterman, principal of Mariner’s Christian School. The center
is at 1601 E. 16th St. Information: (949)645-8489.
* Deepa Bharath covers cops and courts. She may be reached at (949)
574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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