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Dr Space Junk vs The Universe: Archaeology and the Future [Hardback]

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Foreword by , (Flinders University)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 210x135x25 mm
  • Sērija : The MIT Press
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262043432
  • ISBN-13: 9780262043434
  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 210x135x25 mm
  • Sērija : The MIT Press
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: MIT Press
  • ISBN-10: 0262043432
  • ISBN-13: 9780262043434

A pioneering space archaeologist explores artifacts left behind in space and on Earth, from moon dust to Elon Musk's red sports car.

Alice Gorman is a space archaeologist: she examines the artifacts of human encounters with space. These objects, left behind on Earth and in space, can be massive (dead satellites in eternal orbit) or tiny (discarded zip ties around a defunct space antenna). They can be bold (an American flag on the moon) or hopeful (messages from Earth sent into deep space). They raise interesting questions: Why did Elon Musk feel compelled to send a red Tesla into space? What accounts for the multiple rocket-themed playgrounds constructed after the Russians launched Sputnik? Gorman—affectionately known as “Dr Space Junk” —takes readers on a journey through the solar system and beyond, deploying space artifacts, historical explorations, and even the occasional cocktail recipe in search of the ways that we make space meaningful.

Engaging and erudite, Gorman recounts her background as a (nonspace) archaeologist and how she became interested in space artifacts. She shows us her own piece of space junk: a fragment of the fuel tank insulation from Skylab, the NASA spacecraft that crash-landed in Western Australia in 1979. She explains that the conventional view of the space race as “the triumph of the white, male American astronaut” seems inadequate; what really interests her, she says, is how everyday people engage with space. To an archaeologist, objects from the past are significant because they remind us of what we might want to hold on to in the future.



A pioneering space archaeologist explores artifacts left behind in space and on Earth, from moon dust to Elon Musk's red sports car.

A pioneering space archaeologist explores artifacts left behind in space and on Earth, from moon dust to Elon Musk's red sports car.

Alice Gorman is a space archaeologist: she examines the artifacts of human encounters with space. These objects, left behind on Earth and in space, can be massive (dead satellites in eternal orbit) or tiny (discarded zip ties around a defunct space antenna). They can be bold (an American flag on the moon) or hopeful (messages from Earth sent into deep space). They raise interesting questions: Why did Elon Musk feel compelled to send a red Tesla into space? What accounts for the multiple rocket-themed playgrounds constructed after the Russians launched Sputnik? Gorman&;affectionately known as &;Dr Space Junk&; &;takes readers on a journey through the solar system and beyond, deploying space artifacts, historical explorations, and even the occasional cocktail recipe in search of the ways that we make space meaningful.

Engaging and erudite, Gorman recounts her background as a (nonspace) archaeologist and how she became interested in space artifacts. She shows us her own piece of space junk: a fragment of the fuel tank insulation from Skylab, the NASA spacecraft that crash-landed in Western Australia in 1979. She explains that the conventional view of the space race as &;the triumph of the white, male American astronaut&; seems inadequate; what really interests her, she says, is how everyday people engage with space. To an archaeologist, objects from the past are significant because they remind us of what we might want to hold on to in the future.

Foreword viii
Acknowledgments xii
Introduction: Looking Up, Looking Down 1(15)
On Earth as it is in heaven
3(6)
A new era of space
9(3)
Or Space Junk's tour of the solar system
12(4)
Chapter 1 How I Became A Space Archaeologist
16(28)
Outback and out of this world
17(3)
The Moon in the living room
20(3)
Venus in glasses
23(2)
Archaeology or astrophysics?
25(5)
Back to the past
30(3)
Stories from stone
33(4)
Lying in the gutter, looking up at the stars
37(4)
Launching into orbit
41(3)
Chapter 2 Journey Into Space
44(35)
1940s: a rocket and a bomb
47(4)
1950s: waging peace in the Cold War
51(5)
1960s: ... and all I got was this lousy dust
56(4)
1970s: the backyard satellite
60(4)
1980s: aiming for the planet of love
64(3)
1990s: if Versace were to design a satellite
67(2)
2000s: a tale of two Rosetta stones
69(4)
2010s: the Starman cometh
73(3)
The phases of the Space Age
76(3)
Chapter 3 Space Archaeology Begins On Earth
79(35)
The Cold War stayed for dinner
82(5)
A space for children
87(3)
The rocket park comes Down Under
90(3)
The ultimate rocket playground
93(3)
Cold War in the desert heat
96(2)
How to forget your own Space Age
98(2)
Valley of the cable ties
100(4)
Artefact of the Space Age - or rubbish?
104(4)
The story of a space age object
108(6)
Chapter 4 Junkyard Earth
114(32)
One thousand elephants orbiting the earth
119(6)
The cane toads of space
125(6)
The cosmos in our backyard
131(4)
Environmental management in space
135(6)
What is dead can never die
141(2)
And warm with human love the chill of space'
143(3)
Chapter 5 Shadows On The Moon
146(35)
When birds migrated to the Moon
149(6)
The children's Moon
155(2)
The Moon of science or the Moon of lovers?
157(3)
The future of the lunar past
160(6)
An ephemeral archaeology
166(3)
A descent into darkness
169(5)
Shadows and dust
174(5)
The many-coloured Moon
179(2)
Chapter 6 The Edge Of Known Space
181(31)
The new worlds
185(7)
The archaeology of not-quite-there
192(6)
The ghost in the machine
198(4)
The place defined by wind
202(4)
Beyond the morning star
206(6)
Chapter 7 Whose Space Is It Anyway?
212(32)
The `sweet poison of the false infinite'
213(4)
Exteriores spatium nullius
217(6)
Who has the rights to space?
223(3)
A planet by any other name
226(3)
Reflecting Earth in space
229(5)
Contested territories
234(7)
Lines on a map
241(3)
Chapter 8 Future Archaeology
244(32)
True infinite
247(5)
The body in the machine
252(4)
Space marked by death
256(4)
When life means gravity
260(5)
The abandoned solar system
265(9)
The Small Dance
274(2)
Selected References 276(7)
Index 283