Small Steps: Mapping the First
Moonwalk
On this day, July 16, in 1969 the Apollo 11 mission launched into
space, which landed Neil Armstrong on the moon.
On July 21, 1969, Neil Armstrong stepped out of the Tranquility Base
lunar module. As millions around the
world watched on live television, Armstrong spoke, “That’s one small step for
[a] man, a giant leap for mankind,” as he stepped on the surface and became the first human to walk on the
moon.
The map shown above (click to enlarge) was created by the United States
Department of Interior and shows the location of the lunar module and the paths
walked by Armstrong and astronaut Buzz Aldrin.
The map shows the American flag planted by the astronauts on the lunar
surface, the television camera, and the locations of soil and seismic testing
performed by the astronauts.
In the book Strange Maps: An Atlas of Cartographic Curiosities by Frank
Jacobs available in the Ball State University Libraries’ GIS Research and Map
Collection (GRMC), this map has been superimposed on a map of a baseball field
to show the small area explored by the astronauts. Armstrong
only walked about 120 meters from the lunar module to the rim of a crater:
“After traveling hundreds of thousands of miles, the landing crew of
the Apollo 11 lunar mission spent two and a half hours on the lunar surface and
in that time barely covered an area the size of a baseball diamond. Or, if your sports preferences lie elsewhere,
half a soccer field, with Armstrong making just one dash at the other side’s
goal.”
Strange Maps and many other atlases and cartographic resources are
available from the GRMC on the second floor of Bracken Library. The GRMC is open Monday through Friday from
7:30 to 4:30 during the summer.
No comments:
Post a Comment