Good news and bad news. The good news is that one day in the future, we’ll finally fulfill a science fiction dream and be able to create colonies where we can live on other planets.
The bad news? When we’re repopulating those colonies . . . um, men won’t really be necessary.
A new study found that when frozen sperm samples were exposed to microgravity situations, they held up and survived perfectly.
So when it’s time to colonize Mars or wherever, instead of sending up co-ed crews to do the whole Adam and Eve thing, it could just be all-female crews traveling with a frozen sperm bank instead.
And that might be smart . . . because a NASA study once found that space crews where everyone’s the same gender do better on missions and have more cohesive teams.
It's not unreasonable to think a future generation of space men (and women) could come from frozen semen.https://t.co/PUSFjq698i
— CNET News (@CNETNews) June 24, 2019
Scientists have found that frozen sperm samples are still viable after exposure to simulated space flight, opening up the possibility of a space-based sperm bank — and reproduction beyond Earth https://t.co/by8n8vZxj2
— CNN (@CNN) June 25, 2019
Scientists explore the possibilities of launching the first human sperm bank outside of Earth https://t.co/dWl7viy6u1
— Sky News (@SkyNews) June 24, 2019