βArcheologyβ on the ISS helps identify what astronauts really need
βArcheology really is a perspective on material culture we use as evidence to understand how humans adapt to their environment, to the situations they are in, and to each other. There is no place, no time that is out of bounds,β says Justin Walsh, an archeologist at Chapman University who led the first off-world archeological study on board the ISS.
Walshβs and his team wanted to understand, document, and preserve the heritage of the astronaut culture at one of the first permanent space habitats. βThere is this notion about astronauts that they are high achievers, highly intelligent, and highly trained, that they are not like you and me. What we learned is that they are just people, and they want the comforts of home,β Walsh says.
Disposable cameras and garbage
βIn 2008, my student in an archeology class raised her hand and said, βWhat about stuff in space, is that heritage?β I said, βOh my God, Iβve never thought of this before, but yes,ββ Walsh says. βThink of Tranquility baseβitβs an archeological site. You could go back there, and you could reconstruct not only the specific activities of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, but you could understand the engineering culture, the political culture, etc. of the society that created that equipment, sent it to the Moon, and left it there.β