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Mareta West

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Name
  
Mareta West

Died
  
November 2, 1998

Education
  
University of Oklahoma



Born
  
August 9, 1915 (
1915-08-09
)

AFROPOP - Reneta Ndisang (Mareta West) Teaser


Mareta N. West (August 9, 1915 – November 2, 1998) was an American astrogeologist who in the 1960s chose the site of the first manned lunar landing, Apollo 11. She was the first female astrogeologist. Her cremated remains were launched into space.

Contents

Early life

West was born August 9, 1915. She received her bachelor's degree in geology from the University of Oklahoma where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.

West was a third-generation Oklahoman, her grandparents having moved to Indian Territory in 1889.

Career

In the 1940s, West worked as a petroleum geologist in the oil and gas industry before becoming the first woman geologist hired by the United States Geological Survey in Arizona. She was the first woman astrogeologist.

West chose the site of the Apollo 11 first manned lunar landing.

Publications

  • Nuclear Power Reactor Sites in the Southeastern United States, 1978.
  • West Side of the Moon
  • Cremated remains launched into space

    Her cremated remains were launched into space aboard a SpaceLoft-XL rocket on April 28, 2007 as part of the first commercial attempt to launch human remains for lunar "burial". This was a sub-orbital launch, and the cremains were recovered afterwards. They were launched again on August 2, 2008, aboard a Falcon 1 rocket. The intended destination of this flight was low Earth orbit, however the rocket failed two minutes after launch.

    References

    Mareta West Wikipedia