Small Steps: Mapping the
First Moonwalk
Today marks the anniversary
of the Apollo 11 mission that landed Neil Armstrong on the moon. Hours later on July 21,
1969, 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, one giant leap for mankind,” as he stepped on the surface to
become 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.
And exactly how big is the
moon? The Web page io9 explained the relative size compared to the United States
(above). The third map was drawn by
Burris High School student Chloe Newman and donated to the GRMC.
Strange
Maps, maps of the lunar
surface and the solar system, and many other atlases and cartographic resources
related to outer space are available from the GRMC on the second floor of
Bracken Library. The GRMC is open during
the summer from 7:30 am to 4:30 pm.
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