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[0112] PERSONNEL FILE
Marc Garneau
DECEASED / CSA

MARC GARNEAU

Canadian Astronaut - Government

Time in Space
29d 1h 59m 59s
Spacewalks
0
Missions
3
Age
76
External Resources

Biography

Garneau was one of the first Canadian Astronauts and he became the first Canadian in outer space in October 1984. In 1984, he was seconded to the new Canadian Astronaut Program (CAP), one of six chosen from over 4,000 applicants. He flew on the shuttle Challenger, STS-41-G from October 5 to 13, 1984, as payload specialist. He was promoted to Captain in 1986, and left the Navy in 1989, to become deputy director of the CAP. In 1992–93, he underwent further training to become a mission specialist. He worked as CAPCOM for a number of shuttle flights and was on two further flights himself: STS-77 (May 19 to 29, 1996) and STS-97 (to the ISS, November 30 to December 11, 2000). He has logged over 677 hours in space. In February 2001, he was appointed executive vice-president of the Canadian Space Agency, and became its president on November 22, 2001.

Born on February 23, 1949. Died on June 4, 2025. Throughout a distinguished career, Marc Garneau has logged 29d 1h 59m 59s in space across 3 missions.

Fact Sheet

Full Name

Marc Garneau

Nationality

Canadian

Date of Birth

February 23, 1949

Date of Death

June 4, 2025

Age

76

Type

Government

Status

Deceased

Agency

Canadian Space Agency (CSA)

First Flight

1984

Last Flight

2000

Mission Statistics

Total Flights

3

Total Landings

3

Total Spacewalks

N/A

Cumulative Time in Space

29d 1h 59m 59s

Cumulative EVA Time

0d

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