Astronaut tosses old junk from space station

? A spacewalking astronaut did some massive housecleaning at the international space station Monday, tossing out a camera mounting and an ammonia tank weighing more than half a ton.

Astronaut Clay Anderson, at the end of the robotic arm on the international space station, releases a piece of hardware to burn in the Earth's atmosphere.

The outdated equipment was no longer needed and joined more than 9,000 pieces of orbital debris already being tracked from Earth.

“I’ll be sending my bill in the mail for trash disposal,” Clayton Anderson joked to Mission Control.

Anderson, a sportsman who enjoys officiating basketball games back on Earth, hurled the 1,400-pound, refrigerator-size ammonia tank away from the station with a single strong shove. His first toss was a 200-pound camera mounting.

Mission Control praised the tank throw as being “right down the middle.”

“Well, in that case, give Brad Lidge and Roy Oswalt a call and tell them I just hummed a 17,500-mph fastball,” Anderson said, referring to the star pitchers for his hometown Houston Astros.

For each celestial toss, Anderson leaned back on the end of the space station’s 58-foot robot arm, as far from the space station as possible. He rocked forward and shouted “Jettison!” as he shoved the 4-foot camera mounting into space. He repeated the moves an hour later with the bulkier ammonia tank.

The tank had been launched in 2001 to provide spare coolant in case of a leak at the orbiting complex. The surplus ammonia was never needed, and the tank itself had exceeded its life expectancy.

NASA normally tries to avoid adding to the orbiting junkyard, but officials felt they had no choice in this case. The equipment had to be removed, and because of a looming 2010 deadline for ending all shuttle flights, NASA does not have room on its remaining missions to return the tank to Earth.