A piece of SpaceX rocket just washed ashore after spending over a year at sea, and the pictures are incredible
While some of us were busy munching on turkey this Thanksgiving, a crew of men off the coast of the Isles of Scilly were busy retrieving a piece of SpaceX history. Shown here is a member of the Lyonesse Lady freight boat hoisting the object out of the Celtic Sea:
One of the men, James Druce, took to the Internet for help.
He posted some photos on Imgur, explained the discovery on Reddit, and reached out to Elon Musk - founder and CEO of SpaceX - on Twitter:Musk has not responded since Druce's tweet from yesterday, but he didn't have to.
A band of SpaceX fans in the Reddit community /r/SpaceX quickly banned together to tackle the mystery of the unidentified rocket mission.
After addressing more than a dozen Falcon 9 launches over the past 3 years, one Reddit commenter thinks they have the answer:
Comment from discussion Scilly Falcon 9 - Updates.
And Druce agreed on Twitter:
It was the fourth unmanned resupply mission that SpaceX had launched to the International Space Station under a contract with NASA.
The piece that washed ashore is what's called the interstage module, which connects the first and second stages of the rocket. This piece landed in the Atlantic Ocean after helping transport the second stage and a Dragon spacecraft to space.
Among the Dragon's cargo was the first 3D printer to go to space and 20 mice for research on the long-term effects of space on mammals. Here's the piece of rocket that washed ashore:
If SpaceX does not want to retrieve the long-lost, logo-decorated rocket piece, then Druce has one idea of what to do with it, which he told Motherboard's Becky Ferreira:
"Tresco Abbey Gardens has an amazing and beautiful display of wrecked ship figureheads, called 'Valhalla,'" he said. "It would be brilliant to display it there-pieces of wrecked ship, from both the naval age and the space age, all ending up on Scilly."
Druce later released this video on YouTube of the SpaceX rocket being driven to a storage unit: