Mice, Newts Retrieved After a Month Orbiting Earth At 345 Miles Up
The Associated Press (as carried by the Washington Post) reports that a living payload of newts and mice has been retrieved after a month orbiting earth in a Russian space capsule at an altitude of 345 miles, far higher than the ISS's orbital distance of 205 miles.
Says the story: "Fewer than half of the 53 mice and other rodents who blasted off on April 19 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome survived the flight, Russian news agencies reported, quoting Vladimir Sychov, deputy director of the Institute of Medical and Biological Problems and the lead researcher. Sychov said this was to be expected and the surviving mice were sufficient to complete the study, which was designed to show the effects of weightlessness and other factors of space flight on cell structure. All 15 of the lizards survived, he said. The capsule also carried small crayfish and fish."
Radiation? Life support system malfunctions? Launch related problems? Bit more details would make it interesting.
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
Can you believe these animals survived? Who knows what they'll try next, maybe a dog or chimp! One day, humans might even be able to go into space!
Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
No LIZARDS on this spacecraft. Newts are amphibians!!!!
Sources:
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1304/19bionm1/#.UZlBX39dAbE
http://www.space.com/20732-russia-launches-animals-space-bion-m1.html
The gecko's name is Newt. And he thinks he's an amphibian. And I love him.
Another victory for the Cardassian Empire!
Enough is enough! I have had it with these m____________ lizards on this m____________ space capsule!
Also, given their skill in escapology, how many mice actually managed to make it off the ship?
-- A change is as good as a reboot.
Didn't he want to found a moon colony by the end of his second term?
A while back I found a good chart of radiation levels and from memory 300 miles up was the point where radiation levels were too high for permanent human occupation. I wonder if this was the cause...
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
who knows where the OP came up with newts...
Astronewts?
No left turn unstoned.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bion_(satellite) It's the 12th in a series of missions that have been (infrequently) flown since the 70's.