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APOLLO 12 AS 12-48-7141.jpgAS 12-48-7141 - Block Crater139 visiteThis is the first frame is a left-to-right partial pan Al took of Block Crater.Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-48-7100.jpgAS 12-48-7100 - Surveyor III and the LM in the distance143 visiteSurveyor III and the LM. The TV camera is the vertical cylinder to the right of the solar-panel mast and the scoop can be seen extended out to the right. The Surveyor landed on a slope and bounced and slid a short way before coming to rest. Visual evidence comes from the left-hand footpad, which is dug into the soil, and the foreground footpad, which made two distinct imprints nearer us before coming to rest. Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-48-7084.jpgAS 12-48-7084 - Surveyor III on the inner slope of Surveyor Crater130 visiteView of the Surveyor III spacecraft from the rest stop on the inner slope of Surveyor Crater. Block Crater is near the Surveyor Crater rim above and to the left of the Surveyor. Al Bean took this picture with Pete's camera, but with the magazine salvaged from his own camera. The pair of rocks between the Surveyor and Block Crater were the key to Ewan Whitaker's identification of this crater in a Lunar Orbiter photo of the area.
Da aggiungere, al commento originale NASA, una possibile Anomalia: notate, sul margine superiore del frame, quasi perpendicolarmente a Surveyor III, dei curiosi riflessi luminosi. Potrebbero essere un effetto prismatico come potrebbero anche essere l'indicazione di un fenomeno diverso. Purtroppo questa è l'immagine migliore che abbiamo...Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-47-6993.jpgAS 12-47-6993 - Surveyor Crater and Surveyor III105 visiteMa il denaro "distolto" dallo HSP non è stato MAI destinato a quello che, pomposamente, qualcuno ha chiamato e chiama il "Bene della Nazione (gli USA) e dell'Umanità".
(note: this frame from Alan Bean's 4 o'clock pan is centered on Surveyor III Probe).Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-47-6950.jpgAS 12-47-6950 - The Lunar Module (up-Sun)100 visiteUp-Sun frame from Al's 12 o'clock pan. In the glare of the Sun, we can see Pete at the MESA. The HTC sample bag is at the right.Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-47-6920.jpgAS 12-47-6920 - The Magnetometer and other SEQ118 visiteCross-Sun of the magnetometer after deployment. The Central Station is left of center at the top, with the Passive Seismic Experiment farther to the right. Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-47-6897.jpgAS 12-47-6897 - Deploying the Flag125 visiteAl took this picture of Pete Conrad early in the first EVA, shortly after they deployed the U.S. flag. Note the length of Pete's shadow. The shadow of the LM enters the picture from the middle of the left edge. Pete is grasping the flag because the locking hinge that was supposed to hold the crossbar and flag out from the staff would not latch.Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-46-6806.jpgAS 12-46-6806 - Alan Bean carrying the ALSEP135 visiteAl is carrying the ALSEP package out from the LM. As can be seen in a detail, he is walking flat-footed, in part because the mass of the ALSEP packages is nearly the same as the combined mass of him and his suit and backpack and, in part, because the carrybar is flexing and would be difficult to control if he tried to use a loping stride. Note that he is holding the carrybar in his hands, with his arms hanging down in front of him. Other LMPs discovered that it was easier to carry and control the packages by holding their arms up in front of them and getting the carrybar in the elbow crooks. Note the flag and the S-Band antenna to the left of the LM.Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-46-6794.jpgAS 12-46-6794 - The "Lunar Mound"163 visiteAs Pete Conrad got closer to the larger mound, he took a stereopair, starting with this frame. Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-46-6746.jpgAS 12-46-6746 - The "Eastern Wall" of Surveyor Crater (2)159 visiteCaption NASA originale:"First frame from Pete Conrad's 4 o'clock pan showing the deep shadow on the eastern wall of Surveyor Crater and (...) the sunlit solar panels of Surveyor III.
Compare with the corresponding frames from Pete's 12 o'clock pan, AS 12-46-6741 and his 8 o'clock pan, AS 12-46-6769. Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-46-6769.jpgAS 12-46-6769 - The "Eastern Wall" of Surveyor Crater150 visiteFrame from Pete's 8 o'clock pan showing the deep shadow on the eastern wall of Surveyor Crater and, as indicated in a detail, the sunlit solar panels of Surveyor III. Compare with the corresponding frames from Pete's 12 o'clock pan, AS 12-46-6741 and his 4 o'clock pan, AS12-46-6746. Gen 05, 2005
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-46-6741.jpgAS 12-46-6741 - The "Eastern Wall" of Surveyor Crater (1)182 visiteFrame from Pete Conrad's 12 o'clock pan showing the deep shadow on the eastern wall of Surveyor Crater and, as indicated in a detail, the sunlit solar panels on the Surveyor III spacecraft on the left. Compare with the corresponding frames from Pete's 4 o'clock pan, AS 12-46-6746 and his 8 o'clock pan, AS 12-46-6769. The body and legs of the Surveyor are in shadow. Note the two overlapping craters on the sunlit, southeast inner wall of Surveyor Crater. Note, also, the blocky rimmed crater just outside the LM shadow in the foreground. These blocks may be ejecta from Surveyor Crater which was buried by regolith sprayed onto the site by other impacts and was then brought back to the surface for a second time (at least) by the impact that made the small crater.Gen 05, 2005
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