- Remarkable Rarities auctioned off cockroaches and
moon dust collected during anApollo 11 mission in 1969, per The AP. - The auctioned materials were used in an experiment to determine if lunar rocks contained any pathogens that could threaten terrestrial life.
According to the auction site, the cockroaches and moon dust were used in an Apollo 11 experiment to determine if lunar rocks contained any sort of pathogen that could threaten terrestrial life.
The three German cockroach carcasses and 40 milligrams of moon dust were auctioned on May 25 this year and reached $400,000. In a letter to the Remarkable Rarities, NASA's lawyer stated that all materials from the experiment were federal property, The Associated Press reported.
"All Apollo samples, as stipulated in this collection of items, belong to NASA, and no person, university, or other entity has ever been given permission to keep them after analysis, destruction, or other use for any purpose, especially for sale or individual display," NASA said in a letter dated June 15, per The AP.
Remarkable Rarities had withdrawn the auction on Thursday. However, the
"We have worked with NASA before and have always cooperated with the U.S. government when they lay claims to items," Mark Zaid, an attorney for RR Auction, told The AP. "At the end of the day, we want to act appropriately and lawfully."