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New NASA Images Reveal Snowy Martian Dunes

New NASA Images Reveal Snowy Martian Dunes

Snow and ice cover dunes on Mars in this image recently captured by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter; unlike on Earth, this snow and ice is made of carbon dioxide, not water. NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Snow and ice cover dunes on Mars in this image recently captured by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter; unlike on Earth, this snow and ice is made of carbon dioxide, not water.

Skiers will go a long way to shred some fresh powder. Whether it’s trotting off cross country in search of the best slopes, risking an avalanche to a get a few runs in or even jumping out of a helicopter onto an untouched patch of fluffy snow, the desire to conquer a new adventure with two poles and a pair of sleds attached to your feet knows no bounds. If some fascinating new photos from NASA are any sign, the next big ski destination may be extraterrestrial.

A roving NASA spacecraft called the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) popped a series of high resolution shots recently, detailing dunes dusted with what looks like snow. A closer peek, however, revealed that the cold, white substance is more like what we here on Earth know as dry ice — frozen carbon dioxide. The frosty layer cracks and melts in the sunshine. It also wanders into small ridges that keep the ice cold and create some pretty interesting patterns. They almost look like some of those crop circles that creative farmers (and/or their drunken neighbors) mow into the grass out in the middle of nowhere to make it look like an alien landing pattern.

The MRO has been out there buzzing around the red planet since 2014, snapping photos to give scientists, researchers and just plain curious folks a glimpse at what’s happening on the surface of our neighbor. Unfortunately, we humans are not ready to hit the interplanetary slopes just yet. Mars doesn’t have an atmosphere as hospitable as ours, leading to harsh weather conditions on the ground. That makes it tough for anything to survive on the planet, let alone a couple of ski bunnies who usually spend their winters on Tahoe.

NOW THAT’S INTERESTING
In Mars’ ancient past, “mega-tsunamis” swept across its surface after two separate large meteorites struck the planet, permanently changing the Martian terrain — but also leaving evidence Mars was once covered in cold, salty oceans.


Could Astronauts Harvest Nutrients From Their Waste?

Could Astronauts Harvest Nutrients From Their Waste?

A new study suggests that modified yeast feeding on human waste can make useful byproducts for long missions in space

Mars Urine
Astronauts traveling to Mars may be able to pack a little lighter with microbes that could make nutrients and the building blocks of plastic. 

There’s no doubt that the journey to Mars will be a feat of both engineering and logistics. But a few basic human waste products could actually help in the venture, providing not only  vital nutrients, but also materials that could be used to make tools.

In a presentation given this week at the American Chemical Society’s National Meeting and Exposition, a scientist from Clemson University explained how genetically engineered yeast could feed on the astronaut’s urine and carbon dioxide to produce valuable byproducts like omega-3 fatty acids and compounds commonly found in plastics, reports Andrew deGrandpre for the Washington Post.

“If astronauts are going to make journeys that span several years, we’ll need to find a way to reuse and recycle everything they bring with them,” biomolecular engineer Mark Blenner said in a statement before his presentation. “Atom economy will become really important.”

This is an urgent problem. NASA is hoping to start human settlements on Mars in the next 20 years, and private space companies are pushing for even faster colonization. But this will be no easy feat. Mars is just over 30 million miles from Earth, and the people that eventually make the trip must be protected and nourished throughout the journey.

Every supply brought on board adds to the total mass of the craft flung into space. Not to mention each extra tool takes up space in what will likely already be a cramped environment. But without adequate provisions and tools, astronauts on board the Mars-bound craft would be doomed before they even left Earth.

To help get around this problem, NASA has been funding Blenner since 2015 to scrutinize a strain of yeast called Yarrowia lipolytica, reports Catherine Caruso for STAT. Blenner has used the yeast strain, a close relative of baker’s yeast available in grocery stores, as a template that he then modifies with genes from algae and phytoplankton. These alterations allow the microbes to produce the omega-3 fatty acids necessary for healthy metabolism in humans.

This yeast can also be genetically engineered to produce monomers, the basic building blocks of polymers that could be used by 3D printers to create new tools on the spacecraft or on Mars, reports Becky Ferreira of Motherboard.

But the yeast still need fuel to produce these products. That’s where the astronauts, and their waste, come in. The microbes can use the nitrogen in human urine and carbon dioxide from their breath to create useful compounds.

This work is still in its very early stages, notes Nicola Davis of the Guardian. Blenner still needs to tweak the yeast so that it produces useful quantities of the nutrients and monomers. There’s also the question of whether the microbes could survive in the low-gravity, high-radiation conditions of a trip to Mars.

If it all works out, however, future settlers on the Red Planet might not have to live solely off potatoes.

Attachments area

Preview YouTube video Turning human waste into plastic, nutrients could aid long – distance space travel (video)

Turning human waste into plastic, nutrients could aid long – distance space travel (video)

Meet Florence: The Giant Asteroid That Will Buzz Earth This September

Meet Florence, the Giant Asteroid That Will Buzz by Earth This September

The 2.7-mile-long, near-Earth object will give astronomers a chance to study the asteroid up close

NEO
A Near Earth Object

Now that solar eclipse-mania has passed, it’s time to get excited for another astronomical event: an asteroid passing by. On September 1, a space rock dubbed Florence will become the largest asteroid to zoom past Earth since near-Earth asteroids were discovered a century ago, reports Eddie Irizarry at EarthSky.

Measurements made by the Spitzer Space Telescope and NEOWISE asteroid-hunting instrument suggest that Florence is around 2.7 miles across, according to NASA. The asteroid will pass 4.4 million miles from Earth, about 18 times the distance from the Earth to the moon. That is a long ways, but on the galactic scale, it’s a hair’s breadth.

“While many known asteroids have passed by closer to Earth than Florence will on September 1, all of those were estimated to be smaller,” Paul Chodas, manager of NASA’s Center for Near-Earth Object Studies says in the press release. NASA has tracked these near-Earth objects since 1998, and Florence tops the charts.

The space rock, officially called Asteroid 1981 ET3, was first detected at Australia’s Siding Spring Observatory in 1981 and was named Florence 3122 in honor of Florence Nightingale, the mother of modern nursing, Irizarry reports.

While there’s no chance that the asteroid will hit Earth, NASA says its size and proximity makes a perfect target for ground-based radio telescope observations, which may produce images of the asteroid with a resolution as clear as 30 feet.

It will be clearly visible in the night sky for amateur astronomers, passing through the constellations of Piscis Austrinus, Capricornus, Aquarius and Delphinus beginning on August 27.  “[Its] visible magnitude of 9 is really bright,” Rüdiger Jehn, co-manager of the European Space Agency’s Near Earth Object segment tells Ryan F. Mandelbaum at Gizmodo. “Every amateur astronomer will be able to see it.”

Florence isn’t the first or last asteroid to dance with Earth this year. In January of 2017, asteroid AG13 snuck up on astronomers. The space rock was between 36 and 111 feet wide and passed Earth at half the distance to the moon. Another asteroid in the same size range, 2012 TC4 is scheduled to pass roughly one-fourth the distance to the moon—between 4,200 miles and 170,000 miles—on October 12, 2017.

Currently, NASA is tracking 1,826 near-Earth objects classified as Potentially Hazardous Asteroids, which have some risk of striking our planet in the future. Among those, reports Irizrarry, are several even larger than Florence, including 1999 JM8 at 4.3 miles across, 4183 Cuno at 3.5 miles across and 3200 Phaeton at 3.2 miles across. But none has come as close as Florence will next month.

There’s no chance the space rock will collide with Earth anytime soon. Florence won’t make a closer pass until around the year 2500.

Final Report From North Of The Arctic Circle On The FMARS 60 Mission

 

MARS SOCIETY ANNOUNCEMENT
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Final Crew Report
Mars 160 Mission (FMARS)
Summer 2017Hello from Mars,
火星からこんにちは (Kasei kara konnichiwa),
Привет с Марса (Privet s Marsa),
मंगल ग्रह से नमस्ते (Mangal grah se Namaste),
Salutations Martiennes,

This is the final crew expedition of the Mars 160 program. We are six people living in the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station(FMARS), in the Canadian High Arctic far from home. Over here we can only rely on ourselves. The nearest town is Resolute Bay, a one hour of flight from the station.

We have this unique opportunity to sojourn in one of the greatest Mars analog environment on Earth! Mars atmosphere is quite cold and Polar climate is similar. Patterned ground features, characteristic of the permafrost, are observed here and there. On Mars, you would find impact craters in various size and age.Haughton crater is 15 km in diameter and 39 million years old. The station sit on its edge. However, unlike Mars, this place is populated by living extremophile organisms. But some of them could be the key to the survival of the first Mars settlers or to find past life on this planet!

Our goal is to experience some of the remoteness of Mars to learn how to conduct field science operation in such conditions. The scientific investigations are diverse and ambitious.

Life
30 days in Arctic felt like 80 days in Utah desert. Time stretched here and we are adjusting to the environment, just as the humans will do on Mars. By looking at the landscape, almost nothing reminds us of Earth. No signs of any civilization. No signs of life. Just as it will be on Mars. FMARS station showed us vividly how it would feel like to live and work in the alien world.

Resources are also more limited here than at the Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS), especially power. This imposes a limit on what we do and when we do it. To conserve fuel, the generator is ran 9 hours a day, with gaps up to two hours. When the generator is off, there is no heater, no comms, no cooking. Hopefully we all have laptops that can ran for few hours on the battery, allowing us to keep working. During comms windows, Internet is our only regular way to communicate. Satellite based communication imposes new constraints on how we use it. The bandwidth of few kB/s and the latency rarely below few seconds, if not losing the satellite signal, does not allow us for much more than emailing with the remote team and our relatives.

Unlike the MDRS journeys, we are self-sufficient regarding the water supply which is fetched from a river few hundred meters down the hill. However, we arrived at the station with the food we would get for the entire mission. As the end of the expedition approaches we have seen our food supplies shrinking. Even with safety margin, it is a strange feeling to have noticed that we are actually limited in food supply. This is not something we usually experienced in our regular life. Therefore, we are taking care that nothing got wasted!

The Arctic is a much more extreme environment than Utah. Our operations have to be much more autonomous and self-sufficient on a day to day basis. Communications are more limited, requiring independence of thought and action. This is not a bad thing, with a crew of competent, motivated people this is actually liberating. It does, however, mean that more time must be spent on basic Hab tasks, underlying the importance of automation to crewed missions to Mars and elsewhere. Being in an extreme environment means that safety considerations come first. There is a greater awareness when we are on EVA of distance from the Hab and the instability of the weather.

After this expedition got delayed by more than 3 weeks due to bad weather and ground conditions that prevented us to land on schedule, the mission objectives had to be redefined under the new time constraints. Therefore, no engineering project is conducted during this expedition. The unique features of the field gives priority to the field science activities over all the rest. That is why we have directed all our efforts to fulfill has many field science objectives as we can.

Geology
The month at FMARS has been a very valuable experience for us in that it has better equipped us to assess previous Mars analogue research at Haughton crater and provided an opportunity for our own investigations.

Part of what makes FMARS an ideal Mars analog facility is its location in a periglacial environment along the rim of an ancient impact crater. This is a rare setting to have on Earth, but it is repeated planet-wide on Mars. Based on observations by the Phoenix mission in 2008, the role of water ice permafrost in the formation of periglacial features on Mars was confirmed making many periglacial processes on Earth a direct analog for Mars. This provides an opportunity to study some of the younger geological processes that are active on Mars today, right here on Earth.

One periglacial feature that is common between Mars and Earth is patterned ground. Formed as a result of expansion and contraction from freezing and melting permafrost, over time this process etches patterns into the ground ranging from a few meters to several tens of meters across. When comparing satellite images of the patterned ground in Haughton Crater to patterned ground on Mars, it is easy to see why these are such intriguing subjects to study near FMARS.

Over the course of Mars 160, dozens of samples have been collected from a variety of patterned ground types that once analyzed in a laboratory setting back on Earth will shed new insights into how these landforms evolve. By performing most of these field tasks in-sim as weather conditions allowed, it also provided insight into how a crewed mission might investigate similar features on Mars in the future. The results from this investigation will ultimately be submitted for peer-review in an applicable professional journal.

We have been able to collect extensive imagery of the Devon Island landscape that will enable me to refine the regolith landscape mapping methodologies previously developed for cold climate landscapes. Especially valuable have been the landscape features poorly expressed at previous study sites, such as different types of polygons, and a greater appreciation of role of near-surface hydrology in Arctic landscapes.

The bedrock geology of the rim of Haughton crater near the FMARS station is composed on the Allen Bay Formation. Two main facies (rock types with similar characteristics) are present, a dark brown dolostone and a white dolostone. The dark brown facies is rich in megafossil remains, especially of sponges (stromatoporoids), corals (tabulate and both colonial and solitary rugose), and molluscs, most prominently straight nautiloid cephalopods. This facieses commonly intensely bioturbated and may be thrombolitic (a microbial structure with a clotted fabric). The white facies is dominated by laminated and often stromatolitic dolostones, mudcacks and ripples have been rarely seen. Studying these rocks has been made difficult by the lack of coherent outcrop. However, the outcrops present do enable the context of the abundant displaced blocks to be placed in context.

We have also taken the opportunity to familiarize ourselves with impact related features of the Haughton crater. These have included the distinctive grey-coloured polymict melt sheets containing many different rock types, the monomict breccias consisting of fractured bedrock more or less in places with numerous shatter cones, and the polymict ejecta rocks. These impact-related rock types are common on the Moon and Mars, but rare on Earth, where craters are rapidly (geologically speaking) destroyed by erosion or hidden by burial. Here these rocks are widely distributed on the walls and across the floor of Haughton crater.

Biology
Biological exploration here at FMARS involves an array of themes, from documenting the Arctic flora to investigating bio-signatures in ancient evaporite rocks. To test the efficiency of science operations on Mars, our scientific work is supported by Earth-based scientists.

Hydro-thermal sulfate deposits from the Impact super site which is located near the middle of the Haughton crater have been sampled to investigate any viable or fossilized signatures of life originated and thrived during impact-induced hydrothermal event in the past. These gypsum-bearing evaporites from outcrops belong to the mid-Ordovician Bay Fiord Formation (39 mya). In the Bay Fiord Formation the gypsum was deposited through evaporation of seawater. Elsewhere in the crater gypsum is known to have formed as a result of the impact driven hydro-thermal activity. Both the processes are considered to be analogous to the sulfate precipitation from the low-temperature aqueous fluid on Mars. So, any microbial life that was present in the brine could have found refuge in tiny fluid-inclusions of the gypsum crystals in the past or potentially left their marks in the depository layers while degradation. Hence, it is fascinating to explore the idea of preservation of bio-markers in evaporite rocks.

The abundance, and ecology of hypoliths and epiliths colonised on limestone in the Arctic are being documented. As well as, we intend to perform comparative genomic analysis on these hardy microbial communities. Identification and characterization of black epiliths, which are commonly seen to be growing on the melt water streaks that we call Recurrent Slope Lineae is also conducted. By studying these lithobionts – rock dwelling organisms – we are trying to understand the effect of moisture on the extent of colonization both in Polar (Arctic) and hot desert (Utah). So, this mission gives us an ideal opportunity to explore these microbial communities in two disparate environments, thereby, would provide an important baseline in this domain and help us anticipate “exophiles” in unanticipated niches of Mars.

Mapping and surveying of lichen biodiversity, Arctic vesicular plants, and molecular analysis of Arctic Diatoms are being studied as well. Studying lichen biodiversity is important for this mission for two reasons. First, Lichen that form an intimate symbiosis with two very different species fungi (mycobionts) and algae (photobionts) and resistant enough to survive extremely low temperatures, high bombardment of ultra violet radiation for a long period of time and show excellent physiological adaptation in Mars-like conditions. So, they can serve as tools for understanding life in extreme environments. Second, for the operational advantage in full simulation suit we dedicate some our EVAs to sample lichen that are evident and easiest to find organisms. It is also about how we perform field science in spacesuit!

In the extreme Polar environment, vascular plants are thought to flower at specific time in response to lack of nutrients, low moisture and scarcity of pollinators to maximize the reproductive advantage. It is also thought that specific flowering time (phenology) is associated with microbial activity in the root zone of these plants. We want to assess how this association between root microbiom and plant phenology works, which can help us understanding the extreme survivability of Arctic plants, and possibly adaptation of crop plants for Mars.

Science Support & Group Dynamic Studies
360° pictures have been taken in a square mesh pattern. Different distance between each points have been tested: 20, 50 and 100 meters. All of scenery points are navigated by GPS. The procedure at each documented point takes up to 2 minutes during a full simulated EVA of 2 to 3 hours. After the mission, it is intended to reconstruct the landscape with the 360° data in order to support the patterned ground study.

A stereograph kit has been designed prior to the mission and been used on the field during suited EVA to capture stereo anaglyph images (red and blue stereo images). The kit was designed thanks to the prior mission at the MDRS. It is compact and light weight to be carried easily during suited EVA. In addition, it is user friendly for anyone to do stereograph pictures. Finally, the main feature may be the very short time – around 3 seconds – required to take the two pictures. The delay between the shots is critical for the quality of the stereo anaglyph images. The field test involve recreating Phoenix lander anaglyph pictures of similar ground features. The height and the distance between the two pictures have been taken from the lander characteristics.

More 360° pictures and 3D scanning measurements have been taken inside the Hab to later on build VR views of the habitat. This will complement the 3D reconstruction of the interior done with CAD software. Lastly, 24 hour time lapse have been taken on the 1st and 2nd floor to understand the flow pattern of the people living inside. This data may help to design better layout of space habitat.

This part of the mission provided us with more interesting data about group cohesion, the influence of isolation and environment on crew behavior. Earth based science team will process the results of eight different tests and compare how the changes of location (from MDRS to FMARS) crew composition affected the psychological pattern of teamwork. This research will provide valuable data for the future Mars analogue missions and help Mars Society in a process of choosing the compatible people for long duration programs.

In order to assess the positive and negative influences of various feature of the mission, the crew is conducting a guided debriefing at regular intervals. This includes individual brainstorming of the main issues experienced by each crew member, categorized them and finally having a group brainstorming to resolve the most important ones. These session have been found very insightful for crew members. Sharing our issues with the whole crew and working all together toward a solution is a crucial activity for building a strong and cohesive team. This is a critical group feature for crews operating under extreme environment such as Mars.

The limited internet access restricted the active outreach work during the simulation. On other side, the isolation helped to concentrate on documenting the mission in narrative genre, which can be compiled into a book. The outreach will be proceeding after the crew comes back to Earth and will be more engaging with the audience.

The odds have been mostly against us. The delay induced by the bad landing conditions have made us to adapt to the constraints. There was no way around. And since our journey is a one life time opportunity, we learn how to push our boundaries to make the remaining time to be worthwhile. This is not a trivial thing to do and it has not been done without glitches. But at the end of the day, we are in this adventure all together, relying on each other. We face the unexpected events as a crew.

The Mars 160 program and this expedition in particular has been supported by Earth based scientists: Dr. Kathy Bywater, NASA Ames Research Center – USA Dr. Vincent Chevrier, University of Arkansas, USA – Prof. Charles Cockell, University of Edinburgh, UK – Dr. Alfonso Davila, NASA Ames Research Centre, USA – Polina Kuznetsova, Institute of Biomedical Problems, Russia – Dr. Chris Mckay, NASA Ames Research Centre, USA – Dr. Rebecca Merica, University of Nevada, USA – Dr. Irene Lia Schlacht, Politechnico di Milano, Italy – Dr. Matthew Siegler, Southern Methodist University, USA – Dr. Hanna Sizemore, Planetary Science Institute, USA – Dr. David Wilson, NASA Ames Research Center, USA.

As Principal Investigators: Dr. Shannon Rupert, The Mars Society, USA – Paul Sokoloff, Canadian Museum of Nature, Canada.

As The Mars Society president: Dr. Robert Zubrin, USA.

Mars 160 crew members would like to express their sincere gratitude to them:

Thank you!
ありがとう (Aligato),
Спасибо (Spasibo),
धन्यवाद (Dhanyawad),
Merci!

Mars 160 (FMARS), Canada
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Six Memorable Letters From Neil Armstrong

6 Memorable Letters From Neil Armstrong

Original image

NASA/GETTY IMAGES

Neil Armstrong, who would have turned 87 years old today, is remembered as both a “reluctantAmerican hero” and “the spiritual repository of spacefaring dreams and ambitions.” He was a man of few words, but those he chose to share were significant and, occasionally, tongue-in-cheek. Here are some notable letters and notes written by the first man on the moon.

1. ITS TRUE BEAUTY, HOWEVER, WAS THAT IT WORKED.

There was little certainty about what to expect once Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin left the relative safety of the Apollo 11 spacecraft. This was not lost on Armstrong, who sent aletter of thanks to the crew who designed his spacesuit.

2. AMERICA MUST DECIDE IF IT WISHES TO REMAIN A LEADER IN SPACE.

It’s no secret that NASA’s budget has all but disappeared in recent years. Neil, along with James Lovell and Eugene Cernan, had a few things to say about that. The three wrote an open letter to President Obama, urging him not to forfeit the United States’ progress in space exploration and technology. It ends with a sobering prediction, and some advice:

For The United States, the leading space faring nation for nearly half a century, to be without carriage to low Earth orbit and with no human exploration capability to go beyond Earth orbit for an indeterminate time into the future, destines our nation to become one of second or even third rate stature. While the President’s plan envisages humans traveling away from Earth and perhaps toward Mars at some time in the future, the lack of developed rockets and spacecraft will assure that ability will not be available for many years.

Without the skill and experience that actual spacecraft operation provides, the USA is far too likely to be on a long downhill slide to mediocrity. America must decide if it wishes to remain a leader in space. If it does, we should institute a program which will give us the very best chance of achieving that goal.

(Here’s the letter in full.)

3. ALL OF THIS KNOWLEDGE IS YOURS FOR THE TAKING.

In 1971, the children’s librarian of Troy, Michigan’s new public library wrote dozens of letters to notable figures across the globe, asking them to address the children of Troy and speak about the importance of libraries, books, and reading. Among the replies was this note from Armstrong:

Through books you will meet poets and novelists whose creations will fire your imagination. You will meet the great thinkers who will share with you their philosophies, their concepts of the world, of humanity and of creation. You will learn about events that have shaped our history, of deeds both noble and ignoble. All of this knowledge is yours for the taking… Your library is a storehouse for mind and spirit. Use it well.

4. I FIND THAT MYSTIFYING.

After NPR’s Robert Krulwich wondered aloud on-air why the astronauts stayed so close to the landing site (less than 100 yards from their lander), a helpful Armstrong sent over a lengthy letter of explanation, which ended with a little insight about the importance of space exploration (emphasis added):

Later Apollo flights were able to do more and move further in order to cover larger areas, particularly when the Lunar Rover vehicle became available in 1971. But in KRULWICH WONDERS, you make an important point, which I emphasized to the House Science and Technology Committee. During my testimony in May I said, “Some question why Americans should return to the Moon. “After all,” they say “we have already been there.” I find that mystifying. It would be as if 16th century monarchs proclaimed that “we need not go to the New World, we have already been there.” Or as if President Thomas Jefferson announced in 1803 that Americans “need not go west of the Mississippi, the Lewis and Clark Expedition has already been there.” Americans have visited and examined 6 locations on Luna, varying in size from a suburban lot to a small township. That leaves more than 14 million square miles yet to explore.

I have tried to give a small insight into your question “Who knew?”

I hope it is helpful.

(Read the full transcript here.)

5. IT CERTAINLY WAS EXCITING FOR ME.

On the 40th anniversary of the Apollo landing, Armstrong wrote a personal letter of tribute to the Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex, which provided the communications between Apollo 11 and mission control. In part, it reads:

We were involved in doing what many thought to be impossible, putting humans on Earth’s moon.

Science fiction writers thought it would be possible. H. G. Wells, Jules Verne, and other authors found ways to get people to the moon. But none of those writers foresaw any possibility of the lunar explorers being able to communicate with Earth, transmit data, position information, or transmit moving pictures of what they saw back to Earth. The authors foresaw my part of the adventure, but your part was beyond their comprehension.

All the Apollo people were working hard, working long hours, and were dedicated to making certain everything they did, they were doing to the very best of their ability. And I am confident that those of you who were working with us forty years ago, were working at least that hard. It would be impossible to overstate the appreciation that we on the crew feel for your dedication and the quality of your work.

The full text is available on the Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station website.

6. NEXT TIME, BUTT OUT OF OUR BUSINESS!

After a surprise appearance in “Mystery On the Moon,” issue #98 of The Fantastic Four, wherein our intrepid explorers are saved by four mutants in space, this brief note arrived in Stan Lee and Jack Kirby’s mailbox. Was it real? Who knows. But the sentiment remains: We don’t need your superheroes to get to the moon—we have science.

This post originally appeared in 2012.

1969: Stuck On Earth, Photographing The Moom

Photo

John G. Morris, left, conferred with the chief correspondent covering Apollo 11, at Mission Control in Houston. CreditGary Settle/The New York Times

From the deadly beachheads of Normandy to the treacherous streets of Saigon, John G. Morris and the photographers whose work he edited were always at the heart of any news story they covered.

Mr. Morris was himself an eyewitness to the assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy in 1968, shortly after the senator claimed victory in the Democratic presidential primary in California. “He had just moved into an anteroom room cluttered with soggy coffee cups, half-eaten sandwiches and cigar butts when the shots rang out,” Mr. Morris wrote in a front-page account printed in The New York Times — the frantic nature of the moment underscored by that redundant “room” in his copy.

So it’s the height of paradox that Mr. Morris’s favorite news story was one he and his colleagues could only watch from more than 200,000 miles away: the landing of the first astronauts on the moon, on July 20, 1969.

Mr. Morris, who died on Friday at age 100, was the picture editor of The Times from 1967 to 1973. He is renowned for having secured a spot on Page 1 for two of the most indelible images of the Vietnam War, by Eddie Adamsand Nick Ut.

But in a 2006 interview with The Times for “The Last Word,” he said, “The happiest news event of my entire life and the page that was truly fun to close was that of the first walk on the moon, because that was the most positive story I think in my history, something that nobody could possibly feel was a bad, a terrible event.”

Continue reading the main story

“And it’s very interesting that covering the moon walk meant total reliance on television,” Mr. Morris added.

Because of the timing of the lunar exploration, by Neil A. Armstrong, the civilian commander of Apollo 11, and Col. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. of the Air Force, The Times had to use three versions of a 96-point headline.

Photo

Note that the headline says, “Men Land on Moon” — not “Men Walk on Moon.” And there is no image yet from the moon. The anchorman Walter Cronkite showed his viewers an early edition of the July 21, 1969, newspaper. The photo, by CBS News, was featured on the cover of The Times’s house organ.

“Men Land on Moon,” said the first edition, which was on press at 9:30 p.m.

At 10:58 p.m. — after Mr. Armstrong had descended to the surface but before Colonel Aldrin had — the presses were halted so the front page could be “postscripted.”

“Man Walks on Moon,” the next edition said.

By the time the Late City Edition was on press at 12:46 a.m., Colonel Aldrin had joined Mr. Armstrong.

“Men Walk on Moon,” the final and most famous edition said.

Three photographs appeared on Page 1 in the final edition, stacked vertically at the center. Two carried the unusual credit line, “The New York Times From CBS News.” In other words, we took them off the TV. (There were six sets in the building at the time, Mr. Morris recalled in his memoir, “My Century.”)

Mr. Morris finally had a chance to see real photographs of the moon landing on July 29 at Mission Control in Houston. Nine rolls of stills and 13 reels of movie film had returned to earth with the astronauts, he said.

The Times’s corporate jet had been equipped with a light box and a movie-viewing device known as a Moviola so that Mr. Morris; Henry R. Lieberman, the editor in charge of science news; and George Cowan, the managing art director, could examine the duplicate film that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration had provided to The Times.

On their way from Houston to Teterboro Airport — with an ulcer-inducing, three-hour delay because of bad weather — they sketched out a 16-page rotogravure supplement.

“We put together a special issue of The Times Magazine in the Times jet airplane,” Mr. Morris said in the 2006 interview. It was a lot of fun, he allowed.

3COMMENTS

Even though the section did not appear until Aug. 3, it was The Times’s first effort at publishing color photographs of a spot news story.

And Mr. Morris finally had the chance to fly.

Continue reading the main story

Photo

The best Mr. Morris could do was have photos taken of a television set tuned to CBS. This image shows Neil A. Armstrong stepping away from the landing craft after first setting foot on the lunar surface.