History was supposed to be made on Friday with the first all-female spacewalk at the International Space Station. On Monday, Nasa announced it was scrapping that plan because it didn't have enough space suits designed for smaller frames that typically characterise the female body.
To be clear, the number of medium-size spacesuits needed was two. Nasa clarified that it had two on board, but only one was in a "readily usable configuration." It is easier to swap out astronauts than to configure spacesuits, Nasa said, so that's the decision that was made - ignoring how excited land-dwellers may have been about the spacewalk's significance.
Astronauts Christina Koch and Anne McClain were due to spacewalk to replace batteries installed last summer at the International Space Station. But McClain has been replaced by male astronaut Nick Hague.
As this Women's History Month wanes, a 2018 tweet from the Nasa History Office has reorbited, indicating that the agency has historically had some other issues with the whole women-in-space thing.