Quarantines can help a society protect By Jim OBeERG The word comes from the French, for the 40 days of isolation once faced by new arrivals who may have been infected. After the quarantine has passed, they were either certified to be disease-free or dead. Quarantining an entire planet against potentially harmful extraterrestrial dis- eases becomes more difficult. Though the odds are minuscule, what’s needed to prevent something with glo- bal consequences? What protections are reasonable? The launch of Stardust to retrieve a milligram of dust from the Wild-2 comet is the first human attempt to bring itself from dangerous infections back extraterrestrial samples in almost three decades. NASA would like to bring back samples from Mars in less than 10 years. Other comet missions are also on tap, and the Russians dream of retrieving samples from the Martian moons Phobos and Deimos. Life on the Moon, Maybe It’s commonly thought that on at least one occasion, infectious germs were brought back from the moon. This occurred on the Apollo 12 mission in Novem- ber 1969, when the crew re- trieved pieces of the Surveyor 3 robot that had been on the moon for two years. Subse- quent culturing of swabs from various locations gave one positive result of viable Streptococcus mitus spores were picked up from a swab rubbed inside the Surveyor’s camera case. Microbiologists weren’t all that startled by the finding, since the tempera- tures inside the hardware on the lunar surface had stayed well within the range that microbial spores were known to tolerate, even if it had also been in a vacuum (and viable spores have been retrieved from spacecraft brought back after months or even years in Earth orbit). Unfortunately, the technician collecting the lu- nar swabs back in 1969 was seen to violate isolation pro- tocol by laying the new swabs down on a non-steri- lized table surface. So the positive results could have been caused by somebody sneezing in the room the pre- vious day. Even though it’s in- triguing that the one positive was the sample taken from the most sheltered interior location of the hardware, the finding must be chalked u as interesting if true, and le to dangle in perpetual ambi- guity. There’s also the re- newed debate over natural transport, via meteorites and space dust. A century ago, scien- tists used the term “pansper- mia” to describe the possibil- ity that spores could naturally pass from planet to planet. Today, space experts have asked themselves if the quar- antine issue isn’t already moot, since new evidence Space Spores and computer simulations suggest there never has been biological isolation between planets. Asteroid impacts on Earth, the moon and Mars have flung rocks off each world, circling the sun until they slam into a nearby world. One extreme view is that life on Earth is the result of contamination from Mars. That smaller planet cooled earlier than Earth, and seems to have had oceans for hun- dreds of millions of years while Earth’s surface was still molten. Martian rocks bearing spores could have rained upon Earth until our oceans formed and provided a hos- itable environment for a few ucky survivors. From the News Stand... ABC News www.abc.com The Cadre 550 University Avenue Charlottetown, PEI C1A 4P3 phone 902.566.0629 fax 902.566.0979 <newspaper@upei.ca> The Cadre is the official newspaper of the studetns of UPEI. It is published 10 times per semester. 2500 copies are dis- tributed on and off campus on Tuesday. Deadlines for ad- vertisements and submissions are Friday at 12:00 noon, without exception. the Cadre is a member of Canadian University Press (CUP), a cooperative of 50 university and college newspapers. The opinion expressed within the Cadre do not necessar- ily represent the views of UPEI or of the UPEI Student Union Inc. The Cadre is funded by the UPEI Student Union Inc. Editor-in-Chief Karen Rawlines Editor Vacant Production Editor Sarah Murphy News Editor Melissa Doucette Reporter Randy McDonald A&E Editor Vacant Photographer Richard Haines Advertising Manager _ Brian Herrell Circulation Brian Herrell Cover Art Richard Haines Office Assistant Madonna MacDonald Contributors: Marc MacDonald, Ryan O’Connor, Steven McQuaid, David MacDonald, Lindsay Kyte, Matt McQuaid, Janice Muir