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HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks

 
VestanPance
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08/22/2009 10:46 AM
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HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
[link to lroc.sese.asu.edu]

A new snapshot from NASA's newest moon probe has revealed the 38-year-old tracks leftover from a grueling moonwalk by two Apollo astronauts who tried, and failed, to reach a tantalizing crater.

The photograph was taken by a camera on NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) and shows the terrain surrounding the landing site of Apollo 14 astronauts Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell, who touched down on the moon Feb. 5, 1971 in their Antares lander. It was released Wednesday and confirmed that the astronauts came just 100 feet (30 meters) from the rim of their target, Cone Crater, before they turned back, LRO researchers said.

At first glance, the image appears to depict a stark lunar surface devoid of any evidence that humans were there. But a closer inspection can reveal thfuck_offts of the Antares lander and a nearby experiment deployed by the astronauts, which appear at the lower left of the snapshot. The tracks from the boot prints of Shepard and Mitchell appear as wispy, winding lines that are a slightly darker shade of gray from the surrounding terrain.

The region of the moon explored by Shepard and Mitchell on the Apollo 14 mission is a rocky, hilly area known as the Fra Mauro highlands. The mission was the third of six Apollo moon landings between 1969 and 1972.

LRO has beamed home an earlier view of the Apollo 14 landing site, as well as snapshots of Tranquility Base, the first manned landing site visited by Apollo 11 astronauts on July 20, 1969. Researchers overseeing the probe's main camera, called LROC, from Arizona State University released the new images.

The hunt for Cone Crater

On Feb. 6, 1971, during the second moonwalk of their 33-hour stay on the lunar surface, Shepard and Mitchell tried to reach the distant Cone Crater in order to peer down at its bottom. The crater was nearly a mile (1.4 km) away from Antares - placing the lander out of sight for the moonwalkers - and the journey was exhausting since it was almost entirely uphill.

To make matters worse, Shepard and Mitchell had trouble walking uphill in the soft lunar surface and their map of the terrain left much to be desired.

"Another problem was that the ruggedness and unevenness of the terrain made it very hard to navigate by landmarks, which is the way a man on foot gets around," wrote Shepard, who died in 1998, in an account of the mission for NASA's History Office a few years after the mission. "Ed and I had difficulty in agreeing on the way to Cone, just how far we had traveled, and where we were."

It was sometimes easier, Shepard wrote, to carry an equipment cart that was supposed to ease their burden during moonwalks because dragging it as designed was just too tough.

"And then came what had to be one of the most frustrating experiences on the traverse. We thought we were nearing the rim of Cone, only to find we were at another and much smaller crater still some distance from Cone," he wrote in the NASA account. "At that point, I radioed Houston that our positions were doubtful, and that there was probably quite a way to go yet to reach Cone."

In the new LRO image, one landmark dubbed Saddle Rock that was photographed by Shepard and Mitchell can be easily spotted, showing how close the astronauts actually were to their lunar quarry.

Shepard, one of NASA's original seven Mercury astronauts, and Mitchell ended their second moonwalk on a light note despite their frustration trying to reach Cone Crater. Shepard attached a six-iron golf club to the end of a collecting tool to become the first person to golf on the moon.

While Shepard and Mitchell worked on the lunar surface, their crewmate Stuart Roosa orbited the moon in their command module. They left the moon on Feb. 6, 1971 and returned to Earth three days later.

The $504 million LRO spacecraft, meanwhile, is part of NASA's first wave of new missions to explore the moon. The orbiter launched June 18 on a year-long mission to map the moon, study its surface composition and search for hidden water ice tucked away in the permanent shadows of craters at the lunar poles.

[link to www.space.com]
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Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 10:49 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
cool. Thank you
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 10:50 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
 Quoting: VestanPance




spock But not a single shot of the rover or the landing modual support .... OR the BLAST CRATOR made when the modual blasted off into orbit again . lmao

Nice try
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 10:53 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
if you are happy of this shit take a seat

in 1969 they took better snapshots

maybe NASSA is low on budget
scimitar

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08/22/2009 11:01 AM

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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
That is a great photo.

Oh and you can see the LEM's base structure. If you cared to look.
Ominous regressions
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Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 11:01 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
[link to lroc.sese.asu.edu]






spock But not a single shot of the rover or the landing modual support .... OR the BLAST CRATOR made when the modual blasted off into orbit again . lmao

Nice try
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 753965


There was no fucking rover until APOLLO 15.

Blast crater? The lower portion of the lander blocked most of the exhaust, and from readily available video you can clearly see the lander was not pulverized and a crater formed on lift-off from the lunar surface.

putin
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 11:27 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
[link to lroc.sese.asu.edu]






spock But not a single shot of the rover or the landing modual support .... OR the BLAST CRATOR made when the modual blasted off into orbit again . lmao

Nice try


There was no fucking rover until APOLLO 15.

Blast crater? The lower portion of the lander blocked most of the exhaust, and from readily available video you can clearly see the lander was not pulverized and a crater formed on lift-off from the lunar surface.

putin
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 705825


Don't bother explaining facts to the hoax believer idiots. No matter how much evidence is shown to them, they will never believe we landed on the moon. They are idiots. Leave them to their ignorance.
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 11:30 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
Even if we landed on the moon I still want to know if some of the photos and videos were staged.
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 11:32 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
Even if we landed on the moon I still want to know if some of the photos and videos were staged.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 548848


Why would they be?
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 11:35 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
There was no fucking rover until APOLLO 15.

Blast crater? The lower portion of the lander blocked most of the exhaust, and from readily available video you can clearly see the lander was not pulverized and a crater formed on lift-off from the lunar surface.

putin
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 705825


LOL ... the photos was given to us last month last month you dope ... Thats not Photos PRE apollo 15

It would not matter if they landed on the moon in april with a rover ... why not show it ?

And the crater being formed ? .... ok where are the hi res shots of that ?
The Analog Guy

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08/22/2009 11:41 AM

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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
Even if we landed on the moon I still want to know if some of the photos and videos were staged.


Why would they be?
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 705842

Exactly. Also don't think the the Russians didn't track the whole mission and would have blown the lid off of any claims by us that weren't true.
I say burn all of your bridges while you still have control of the flame.
We are like flies crawling across the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel: We cannot see what angels and gods lie underneath the threshold of our perceptions. We do not live in reality; we live in our paradigms, our habituated perceptions, our illusions; the illusions we share through culture we call reality, but the true historical reality of our condition is invisible to us.”
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 11:45 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
There was no fucking rover until APOLLO 15.

Blast crater? The lower portion of the lander blocked most of the exhaust, and from readily available video you can clearly see the lander was not pulverized and a crater formed on lift-off from the lunar surface.

putin


LOL ... the photos was given to us last month last month you dope ... Thats not Photos PRE apollo 15

It would not matter if they landed on the moon in april with a rover ... why not show it ?

And the crater being formed ? .... ok where are the hi res shots of that ?
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 753965


Are you this stupid all the time, or just here?

The photo is of the landing site of Apollo 14. Rovers weren't carried to the moon until Apollo 15.

So, why would there be rover tracks in the Apollo 14 picture?
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 11:50 AM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
Are you this stupid all the time, or just here?

The photo is of the landing site of Apollo 14. Rovers weren't carried to the moon until Apollo 15.

So, why would there be rover tracks in the Apollo 14 picture?
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 705842


ok idiot i can see your not too bright so i will spell it out to you.

W H Y N O T S H O W H I - R E Z P H O T O S O F T H E A P O L L O L A N D I N G S I T E A N D S HO W U S T H E R O V E R ?

And PLEASE dont give me this old shit about the rover being too small to see ..... THEY ARE SHOWING US FOOT PRINTS and we can see them fine .
SnakeAirlines

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08/22/2009 12:03 PM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
W H Y N O T S H O W H I - R E Z P H O T O S O F T H E A P O L L O L A N D I N G S I T E A N D S HO W U S T H E R O V E R ?

And PLEASE dont give me this old shit about the rover being too small to see ..... THEY ARE SHOWING US FOOT PRINTS and we can see them fine .
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 753965


Patience, Little-Brain...

Rovers were at different landing sites, and will be coming to a computer screen near you in the future...

You really need to try decaff...

Amazing pic OPie...Thanks...
"Hold my cat while I bring in my tomato plant. That chemtrail looks like an earthquake chemtrail"

deanoZXT-07/20/2014 07:48 PM
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 12:05 PM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
Are you this stupid all the time, or just here?

The photo is of the landing site of Apollo 14. Rovers weren't carried to the moon until Apollo 15.

So, why would there be rover tracks in the Apollo 14 picture?


ok idiot i can see your not too bright so i will spell it out to you.

W H Y N O T S H O W H I - R E Z P H O T O S O F T H E A P O L L O L A N D I N G S I T E A N D S HO W U S T H E R O V E R ?

And PLEASE dont give me this old shit about the rover being too small to see ..... THEY ARE SHOWING US FOOT PRINTS and we can see them fine .
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 753965


The orbiter has not passed over those sites that had the rover at a low altitude yet. What are you going to say when they do?
Anonymous Coward
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08/22/2009 12:45 PM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
The orbiter has not passed over those sites that had the rover at a low altitude yet. What are you going to say when they do?
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 705842




I doubt we will be here in another 40 years lol

moontards ..you guys are the biggest fun here .

/e waits for the LCROSS Bombing to go accidently into the spot the rover is supposed to be .... "ooowwww sorry guys ... we hit the rover ...it's gone ... never mind "

Landed on the moon in the 60's Bwaaahaah ahahahaha .
ToSeek

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08/22/2009 12:45 PM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
The orbiter has not passed over those sites that had the rover at a low altitude yet. What are you going to say when they do?
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 705842


Now it's "where are the rovers?" When the rovers are photographed, it's going to be "where's the flag?" When the flag is photographed (assuming it hasn't disintegrated from 40 years in sunlight), it'll be something else.
SnakeAirlines

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08/22/2009 12:46 PM
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Re: HI-RES photo of Apollo Moonwalk Tracks
When the rovers are photographed, it's going to be "where's the flag?" When the flag is photographed (assuming it hasn't disintegrated from 40 years in sunlight), it'll be something else.
 Quoting: ToSeek


Where's the golf ball...

chuckle
"Hold my cat while I bring in my tomato plant. That chemtrail looks like an earthquake chemtrail"

deanoZXT-07/20/2014 07:48 PM





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