1 00:00:08,920 --> 00:00:14,280 My name is Ryan Zeigler. I'm the Apollo curator and  I take care of NASA's Moon rocks. As a geologist, we   2 00:00:14,280 --> 00:00:18,520 like to study rocks, we like an excuse to be  outside, we like an excuse to study something   3 00:00:18,520 --> 00:00:22,440 cool, and there isn't much cooler than Moon rocks.  The Apollo samples have taught us a lot about the   4 00:00:22,440 --> 00:00:25,760 Moon for the last 50 years. We've had orbital  missions that have taught us even more about   5 00:00:25,760 --> 00:00:29,720 the Moon and now we're ready to go back and get  samples from new places on the Moon that will   6 00:00:29,720 --> 00:00:33,880 answer questions that we can't answer right now  with the collection we have. I just think these are   7 00:00:33,880 --> 00:00:38,880 the coolest samples ever and that I like taking  care of them to make sure that all the hard work   8 00:00:38,880 --> 00:00:44,840 that's gone into them over the last 50 years is  not lost and therefore uh enables more people to   9 00:00:44,840 --> 00:00:48,440 study them in the future. The best part of this job  is getting to go in the lab and actually see the   10 00:00:48,440 --> 00:00:53,000 samples. I mean a lot of this job is hard you have  to take really good care of things if you goof up   11 00:00:53,000 --> 00:00:56,400 you've damaged the samples forever so there's  there's a fair amount of stress that goes with   12 00:00:56,400 --> 00:01:00,520 it, but then you get to go in and you get to see  new samples when they're opened or you get to hand   13 00:01:00,520 --> 00:01:05,440 out samples to people and they make these amazing  scientific discoveries and while they did most of   14 00:01:05,440 --> 00:01:09,280 the hard work that you know that they wouldn't  have been fully successful without help and so   15 00:01:09,280 --> 00:01:14,920 being able to help that's really the best part  of the day. My job has taken me all over the world,   16 00:01:14,920 --> 00:01:20,520 all over Europe, including some really unusual  places like Vietnam or Japan or Australia so   17 00:01:20,520 --> 00:01:24,320 I've gotten to go all these different places as  part of being the Apollo curator. It's cool that   18 00:01:24,320 --> 00:01:28,280 I'm entrusted with the responsibility of taking  care of these rocks on behalf of the American   19 00:01:28,280 --> 00:01:33,520 people and it's me and the rest of my team's job  to take care of them so that they are preserved   20 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:38,280 and that they are well used and that's really  an honor. If there are kids out there who love   21 00:01:38,280 --> 00:01:42,440 rocks, if you've got a rock collection, if you  want to really study rocks then do more than   22 00:01:42,440 --> 00:01:46,880 just pick up pretty rocks. Try to learn what  the rocks are made out of. Try to identify the   23 00:01:46,880 --> 00:01:51,640 individual minerals inside through minerology or  or what the textures inside the rocks are through   24 00:01:51,640 --> 00:01:56,320 what's called petrography, which is a study of the  textures inside the rocks cause that's how you can   25 00:01:56,320 --> 00:02:01,120 take your collection of rocks and turn it into  a more you know into a career someday. I think   26 00:02:01,120 --> 00:02:06,040 most little kids wanted to be an astronaut and I  loved space and I loved NASA and I always wanted   27 00:02:06,040 --> 00:02:10,080 to work here and then when I got into geology  and I found out there was a chance to actually   28 00:02:10,080 --> 00:02:16,920 study Moon rocks that just it I never looked  back. as soon as I like started down that path   29 00:02:16,920 --> 00:02:22,920 it was all moon rocks all the time. When this job  opened up 12 years ago and I was like oh that's   30 00:02:22,920 --> 00:02:28,040 what I want to do. That's my dream job and so uh  people often ask me what do you want to do next   31 00:02:28,040 --> 00:02:34,590 and I'm like you know I'm good I'm happy where I am. I'm really this is this is the job I love.