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Revision as of 02:28, 8 July 2013
The topic of this article may not meet Misplaced Pages's general notability guideline. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. If notability cannot be shown, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted. Find sources: "Back-contamination" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
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Back-contamination is the informal but widely employed name for the hypothetical introduction of microbial extraterrestrial organisms into Earth's biosphere. It is assumed that any such contact will be disruptive or at least have consequences over which human beings will have little control. The threat of back-contamination from the Moon was the main reason for quarantine procedures adopted for the Apollo program, up until the completion of Apollo 14. Astronauts and lunar samples were quarantined in the Lunar Receiving Laboratory.
The likelihood that a human being or any other animal could literally acquire an alien virus is effectively nil, as viruses are host specific. This does not mean that extraterrestrial microbes cannot act upon one pathogenically: spores might use an organism's body as hosts, while the ingestion of bacteria in any form could produce toxic chemicals. When human beings ingest contaminated food, for example, they are not acquiring a virus in the manner of the flu but the experience may still be lethal because of toxic compounds.
Further, the possibility exists that a microbe might aggressively metabolize some Earth resource were it introduced here, altering atmospheric conditions or the water cycle.
See also
- Aerobiology
- Astrobiology
- Extraterrestrial life
- Forward-contamination
- Living Interplanetary Flight Experiment
- Manned mission to Mars
- Panspermia
- Planetary protection
- Red rain in Kerala