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The ashes of the man who discovered Pluto are currently en route to dwarf planet, scheduled to arrive on the 14th of July, 2015.
Pluto's Discoverer Made the Ultimate Journey to His Find
When Clyde Tombaugh peered through a telescope at Arizona's Lowell Observatory on February 18, 1930, he spotted something no human had seen before: a tiny, distant world at the edge of our solar system. He named it Pluto. Nearly seven decades later, when Tombaugh died at age 90 in 1997, a portion of his cremated remains began an extraordinary journey—a 3-billion-mile voyage to the very planet he'd discovered.
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft launched in January 2006, carrying about one ounce of Tombaugh's ashes in a small memorial canister attached to the spacecraft's upper deck. The two-inch-wide container bore an inscription that captured his life perfectly: "Interned herein are remains of American Clyde W. Tombaugh, discoverer of Pluto and the solar system's 'third zone.' Adelle and Muron's boy, Patricia's husband, Annette and Alden's father, astronomer, teacher, punster, and friend."
Nine Years to Reach a World 85 Years in the Making
On July 14, 2015, New Horizons flew within 7,800 miles of Pluto's surface—the closest any human-made object has ever come to the dwarf planet. For the first time, humanity saw Pluto in stunning detail: icy mountains, smooth plains, and a distinctive heart-shaped region that scientists would name Tombaugh Regio in honor of the man whose ashes had just arrived.
Think about the poetry of that moment. Tombaugh spent his youth grinding telescope mirrors and scanning photographic plates for months to find a single moving dot of light. That dedication paid off when he was just 24 years old, making him one of the youngest astronomers to discover a planet (or dwarf planet, as Pluto was later reclassified in 2006).
The Farthest Human Remains from Earth
New Horizons didn't stop at Pluto. After the flyby, the spacecraft continued deeper into the Kuiper Belt—the region of icy bodies beyond Neptune that Tombaugh's "third zone" hinted at. In 2019, it flew past Arrokoth, the most distant object ever explored by a spacecraft.
Today, New Horizons continues traveling away from our sun at about 33,000 miles per hour, carrying Tombaugh's ashes toward interstellar space. His remains are now the farthest human remains from Earth, and they'll keep going indefinitely. Barring a collision with something in the depths of space, Tombaugh's ashes will drift through the galaxy for billions of years—a permanent memorial to human curiosity.
Tombaugh's children, Annette and Alden, watched the Pluto flyby with tears in their eyes. "He would have just loved this," Annette told reporters. Their father had always hoped someone would visit Pluto in his lifetime, even joking about wanting to see close-up images of the world he found. While he didn't live to see it himself, he made the journey in the most literal way possible.
A Punster's Final Joke
That inscription on the canister—calling Tombaugh a "punster"—wasn't random. He was known for his sense of humor and love of wordplay. There's something fitting about a man who enjoyed jokes getting the universe's ultimate punchline: discovering a planet as a young farm boy from Kansas, then traveling billions of miles to visit it decades after his death.
When Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006, some worried Tombaugh's legacy was diminished. His widow Patsy disagreed. "He would have understood," she said. Science evolves, definitions change, but the achievement remains: Clyde Tombaugh found a world no one knew existed, and now he's exploring it for eternity.