ASI W9700470r1.0
#89 October 1995
Section 6.9.3.2.089.of the Artemis Data Book
Not all the Apollo Missions seem individually remarkable or memorable, even though each in turn expanded the envelope of our operations on the Moon. Apollo 12 and Apollo 14 served as public sleeping pills. The steps each took beyond its predecessor mission were not sufficiently dramatic to maintain public interest. Granted, that's a hard order to fill.
Apollo 15 introduced the moonbuggy rover and at least some of the dozing public woke up briefly to take note. The 25th anniversary of Apollo 15 occurs in July '96 in Spaceweek. What a splendid opportunity, if we were to begin now, to celebrate the anniversary with Design Competi-tions for new lunar rovers, making major advances over past achievement: pressurized cabins?, capacity to operate at night?, multi-day excursions?, "amphibious" duty as spacecraft cabin (the "frog" concept)? etc. If not a design competition, then a series of Workshops with publicized results. It's definitely an opportunity to bring up the topic of going beyond Apollo!
Apollo 17 was our curtain fall effort on the Moon, and the liftoff from the Moon marked the beginning of our long retreat - December '97 marks the 25th anniversary of this triumph become tragedy, this seizure of defeat from the jaws of victory. We could mark it with a series of workshops on an orderly envelope-busting return to the Moon in which we first set up an outpost that can be repeatedly reoccupied, then demonstrate a capacity to remain "overnight" - all month long, then demonstrate the ability to use local resources to make products that will allow us to expand our operations with less reliance on supplies from Earth and at reduced costs.
We propose a major effort at ISDC '97 - Orlando to organize this do-something celebration with follow ups at ISDC '98 - Milwaukee. Yet, building our return founda-tions "on the sand" of public interest is risky business and we must do it as a secondary support strategy only.
Contents of this issue of Moon Miners' Manifesto
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