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The Apollo 11 site is a historical landmark, and it should be treated as such, says Michelle Hanlon, a co-founder of For All Moonkind, an organization of lawyers who specialize in space law.
The clearest view yet of the famous Apollo 11 landing site on the moon was captured by a NASA spacecraft in orbit around our planet's natural satellite. The agency's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter ...
How to find the landing site of Apollo 17 20.19080°N, 30.77168° E Finding the sight of the “last man on the moon” is, I think, just as important as finding the first.
The Apollo 11 landing site wasn't the only one that the LRO camera (dubbed LROC) photographed: It also snapped pictures of the landing sites of the other five Apollo landings.
Wonder what the Apollo 11 landing site looks like today? NASA is going to try to snap a picture of it soon using the cameras of the orbiting Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.
NASA called the Apollo 11 landing site “Tranquillity Base” because the craft touched down in Mare Tranquillitatis, the Sea of Tranquillity.
Cosmic celebrations all around as the July Full Buck Moon coincides with the 55th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing.
A former professor is proposing that the Apollo 11 landing site at Tranquility Base, where humans first stepped foot on the moon, should be named a National Historic Landmark. The academic, Beth O ...
The Apollo 11 landing site, photographed by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. The scene is 925 feet across. NASA "We were very interested in getting our first peek at the lunar module descent ...
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera snapped its best look yet of the Apollo 11 landing site on the moon. The image, which was released on March 7, even shows the remnants of Neil Armstrong and ...
The Apollo 11 crew left behind ample evidence of their expedition to the moon's surface on July 20, 1969, most of which is still visible in satellite images taken nearly five decades later.
Today there are three small craters just north of the Apollo 11 landing site named for the three first Apollo astronauts. Armstrong, at 2.9 miles (4.6 km) is the largest of the three.