[FPSPACE] Where are all the Moon rock?

Robert Pearlman robert at collectspace.com
Sat Jan 16 12:32:22 EST 2010


Excellent news, Keith. Would you happen to have a photo or could you take/obtain a photo of the display that we can present within our guide (now updated to include your report)? 

Where Today Are The Apollo 11 Lunar Sample Displays?
http://www.collectspace.com/resources/moonrocks_apollo11.html

-- 
Robert Pearlman, Editor
collectSPACE - The Source for Space History & Artifacts 
http://www.collectspace.com/
Twitter: @robertpearlman | @collectSPACE

On Jan 16, 2010, at 10:42 AM, Keith Gottschalk wrote:

> I am happy to tell FPSPACE & CollectSpace that I have located your 43rd Apollo 11 moon rock - so you can add my name to the last column of your list!
> 
>    It sits safe & sound inside a glass case mounted on a wooden pedestal in a passageway near the door of our Parliamentary restaurant. This is in
> 
> Parliament,
> Parliament St.,
> Cape Town 8000
> South Africa. 
> 
>      It would be best displayed in a museum, since few spare it a passing glance, save the very occasional passing astronomer & astronautics fan-cum-political scientist.  We will work on that.   But safe it is!
> 
> Keith Gottschalk
> University of the Western Cape.
> Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence, Oakland University 2009-1010.
> 
>>>> LARRY KLAES <ljk4 at msn.com> 01/16/10 5:56 AM >>>
> 
> January 14th, 2010
> Searching for Moon Rocks Here on Earth
> Written by Nancy Atkinson 
> 
> Wanted: Moon rocks. Whereabouts: Unknown. 
> 
> Alarmingly, some of our Moon rocks are missing! After the Apollo Moon landings, then-U.S. President Richard Nixon distributed approximately 250 displays containing lunar surface materials from Apollo 11 (1969) to the 50 states and various other countries around the world, and then later gave away 135 rock samples from Apollo 17 (1972). 
> 
> But NASA is finding that a surprisingly low percentage of these precious rock samples — which are encased in acrylic and mounted on a plaque along with the intended recipient's flag — can actually be located.
> 
> Robert Pearlman at CollectSPACE.com has put together two lists, and the whereabouts of only 42 of the Apollo 11 rock samples are known, while only 61 of the Apollo 17 rocks have been located. 
> 
> Earlier this week, an article in the Honolulu Advertiser rejoiced that Hawaii's missing Moon rocks had been found in a locked cabinet. The rocks weren't technically lost, an advisor to Hawaii's governor said, they just didn't know exactly where they were.
> 
> Full article here:
> 
> http://www.universetoday.com/2010/01/14/searching-for-moon-rocks-here-on-earth/
> 
> 
> 
> All Email originating from UWC is covered by disclaimer http://www.uwc.ac.za/portal

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.friends-partners.org/pipermail/fpspace/attachments/20100116/d86fed87/attachment.html 


More information about the FPSPACE mailing list