, the third great ape and only chimpanzee to orbit the Earth, being prepared for launch on
Mercury-Atlas 5 (November 29, 1961) , flew to an altitude of on December 4, 1959, on a NASA rocket,
Little Joe 2 The first primate launched into high subspace, although not a space flight, was
Albert I, a
rhesus macaque, who on June 18, 1948, rode a rocket flight to over in Earth's atmosphere on a
V-2 rocket. Albert I died of suffocation during the flight and may actually have died in the cramped space capsule before launch. On June 14, 1949,
Albert II survived a sub-orbital V-2 flight into space (but died on impact after a parachute failure) On September 16, 1949, Albert III died below the Kármán line, at , in an explosion of his V-2. On December 8, Albert IV, the second mammal in space, flew on the last monkey V-2 flight and died on impact after another parachute failure On December 4, 1959, from Wallops Island, Virginia, Sam, a rhesus macaque, flew on the
Little Joe 2 in the
Mercury program to high. Chimpanzees
Ham and
Enos also flew in the Mercury program, with Ham becoming the first
great ape or
Hominidae in space. The names "Sam" and "Ham" were acronyms. Sam was named in homage to the School of Aerospace Medicine at
Brooks Air Force Base in
San Antonio,
Texas, and the name "Ham" was taken from Holloman Aerospace Medicine at
Holloman Air Force Base,
New Mexico. Ham and Enos were among 60 chimpanzees brought to New Mexico by the US Air Force for space flight tests. Six were selected to be trained at Cape Canaveral by Tony Gentry et al. Goliath, a squirrel monkey, died in the explosion of his
Atlas rocket on November 10, 1961. A rhesus macaque called Scatback flew a sub-orbital flight on December 20, 1961, but was lost at sea after landing. Bonny, a pig-tailed macaque, flew on
Biosatellite 3, a mission which lasted from June 29 to July 8, 1969. This was the first multi-day monkey flight but came after longer human spaceflights were common. He died within a day of landing. The
Space Shuttle Challenger flight
STS-51-B featured two squirrel monkeys named No. 3165 and No. 384-80. The flight was from April 29 to May 6, 1985. ==France==