Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tracys_Rock> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 33 of
33
with 100 triples per page.
- Tracys_Rock abstract "Tracy's Rock, known as Split Rock or the Station 6 Boulder in the scientific literature, is a large boulder visited by the Apollo 17 crew on December 13, 1972 at their Taurus-Littrow landing site. \"Tracy's Rock\" is its popular name.Scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt and mission commander Eugene A. Cernan spent considerable time studying the rock and its vicinity at station 6 during their third Extravehicular Activity (EVA-3).\"Gene stepped to the northeast corner of fragment 1, put his left hand on the dust-covered shelf to support himself, and reached out as far as possible toward the center of the dusted area and swept the bag twice from his right to his left, leaving furrows and, at the lefthand end of each furrow, a small mound of dust where he stopped... A labeled detail from frame AS17-140-21496 shows the sample location, the area on the shelf probably disturbed by his left hand, and the area on the ground between fragment 1 and the foreground rock that he disturbed while taking the sample and earlier, at about 165:25:48, in the flightline.\"At about 165:33:38, Cernan took a series of photos from higher up the hill. In this photomontage, Schmitt is standing to the left of the rock and the Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) is parked to the right.\"Cernan - 'I haven't seen the rock from this perspective in nearly nineteen years. My hand print really shows you how big the rock is and, in 21482, you can see across to the South Massif and the Scarp. The Scarp looks small in this photo, but I remember how big it was (80 meters) because we went up it.'\"The Tracy's Rock/Station 6 panorama is also featured in David Harland's \"Geology 101 Field Trip\" on the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal's \"Fun Images\" page.".
- Tracys_Rock thumbnail BeanTracyRockThumbnail.jpg?width=300.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageExternalLink www.alanbeangallery.com.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageExternalLink tracyrock-new.html.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageID "4372328".
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageLength "4515".
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageOutDegree "8".
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageRevisionID "664442323".
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink Alan_Bean.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink Apollo_17.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink Category:Geological_features_on_the_Moon.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink Eugene_Cernan.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink Harrison_Schmitt.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink Lunar_rover.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink Taurus–Littrow.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLink File:BeanTracyRockThumbnail.jpg.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tracy's Rock".
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageWikiLinkText "a rock".
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cleanup-rewrite.
- Tracys_Rock wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Tracys_Rock subject Category:Geological_features_on_the_Moon.
- Tracys_Rock hypernym Boulder.
- Tracys_Rock type Place.
- Tracys_Rock type Feature.
- Tracys_Rock comment "Tracy's Rock, known as Split Rock or the Station 6 Boulder in the scientific literature, is a large boulder visited by the Apollo 17 crew on December 13, 1972 at their Taurus-Littrow landing site. \"Tracy's Rock\" is its popular name.Scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt and mission commander Eugene A.".
- Tracys_Rock label "Tracy's Rock".
- Tracys_Rock sameAs Q7831662.
- Tracys_Rock sameAs m.0bzskf.
- Tracys_Rock sameAs Q7831662.
- Tracys_Rock wasDerivedFrom Tracys_Rock?oldid=664442323.
- Tracys_Rock depiction BeanTracyRockThumbnail.jpg.
- Tracys_Rock isPrimaryTopicOf Tracys_Rock.