| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Science and Astronautics - 1966 - 898 pages
...the surface of the Moon and the processes which modify this surface. (3) The history or evolutionary sequence of events by which the Moon has arrived at its present configuration. You recall that we have not been able to determine whether the Moon evolved at the same time as the... | |
| 1967 - 318 pages
...lunar surface and the processes that have modified and shaped the surface, and (3) the evolutionary sequence of events by which the Moon has arrived at its present configuration. These general categories were further subdivided into a series of questions that defined in greater... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Science and Astronautics - 1969 - 1394 pages
...SURFACE OF THE MOON AND THE PROCESSES MODIFYING THE SURFACE • ESTABLISH THE HISTORY OR EVOLUTIONARY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS BY WHICH THE MOON HAS ARRIVED AT ITS PRESENT CONFIGURATION NOTE: FROM A MEETING SPONSORED BY THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, SPACE SCIENCES BOARD. AT WOODS... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Science and Astronautics - 1969 - 1578 pages
...SURFACE OF THE MOON AND THE PROCESSES MODIFYING THE SURFACE • ESTABLISH THE HISTORY OR EVOLUTIONARY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS BY WHICH THE MOON HAS ARRIVED AT ITS PRESENT CONFIGURATION NOTE: FROM A MEETING SPONSORED BY THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, SPACE SCIENCES BOARD. AT WOODS... | |
| United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration - 564 pages
...and the processes modifying the surface of the moon, and to establish the historical or evolutionary sequence of events by which the moon has arrived at its present configuration. For the first missions, four scientific activities were being programmed for the astronauts : making... | |
| William David Compton - 1989 - 444 pages
...the surface of the Moon and the processes modifying the surface, and 3) the history or evolutionary sequence of events by which the Moon has arrived at its present configuration. The possibility that ancient rocks and deposits on the Moon's surface may contain a unique record of... | |
| William D. Compton - 1996 - 428 pages
...Planetary exploration was judged to be the most rewarding scientific objective for the post- Apollo period, with Mars being the most interesting target....exploration, both manned and unmanned (see Appendix 3).46 One question that assumed increasing importance as planetary exploration became more realistic... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Science and Astronautics - 1969 - 1258 pages
...SURFACE OF THE MOON AND THE PROCESSES MODIFYING THE SURFACE • ESTABLISH THE HISTORY OR EVOLUTIONARY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS BY WHICH THE MOON HAS ARRIVED AT ITS PRESENT CONFIGURATION NOTE: FROM A MEETING SPONSORED BY THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, SPACE SCIENCES BOARD. AT WOODS... | |
| 1963 - 232 pages
...SURFACE OF THE MOON AND THE PROCESSES MODIFYING THE SURFACE • ESTABLISH THE HISTORY OR EVOLUTIONARY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS BY WHICH THE MOON HAS ARRIVED AT ITS PRESENT CONFIGURATION NOTE: FROM A MEETING SPONSORED BY THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, SPACE SCIENCES BOARD, AT WOODS... | |
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