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Gerstenmaier said there was no apparent debris that came off the external fuel tank after a "first, quick look." Debris has been a concern for NASA since a piece flew off the fuel tank and caused a breach in the wing of Columbia in 2003, dooming the shuttle and its seven crew members. As insurance, Discovery's crew will spend a good part of Monday examining the shuttle's thermal protection system with cameras and sensors attached to a boom which is hooked to the shuttle's robotic arm. A likely piece of debris that didn't pose any threat to the shuttle was a fruit bat that made a home on the shuttle's external tank for several hours before launch. Although the bat's fate was unknown, it likely perished. "We're characterizing him as unexpected debris and he's probably still unexpected debris somewhere," Leinbach said to laughter at a post-launch news conference. ___ On the Net:
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