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History Daily

The Last Men on The Moon

History Daily

Airship | Noiser | Wondery

History

4.42.1K Ratings

🗓️ 13 December 2024

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

December 13, 1972. Astronauts Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt begin their third moonwalk, the last time a human being sets foot on another world’s surface.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

There are more ways than ever to listen to History Daily ad-free.

0:04.1

Listen with Wondry Plus in the Wondry app.

0:06.0

As a member of NoisorPlus at noisor.com or in Apple Podcasts,

0:10.6

or you can get all of History Daily plus other fantastic history podcasts at Into.40 p.m. on December 11, 1972, 238,000 miles from Earth.

0:33.6

Harrison Jack Schmidt stares intently at the instruments of the Apollo 17 lunar landing module.

0:39.7

As the spacecraft named Challenger descends toward the moon, Jack calls out its altitude and speed.

0:46.2

Standing beside him in the cramped module is mission commander Gene Cernan.

0:50.8

His eyes are fixed on the window and his hands grip the controls.

0:55.0

Apollo 17 is moments away from landing on the moon.

0:59.0

Jack is the less experienced of the two astronauts.

1:02.0

He's never been to space before.

1:04.0

In fact, unlike the other men who have made the journey here before him, he isn't even a pilot.

1:09.0

He's a geologist, and Jack hopes to become the first

1:12.1

scientist to land on the moon, but he and Gene have to get Challenger down safely first.

1:17.7

Their target is the Torres-Litro Valley. It's been chosen for its fascinating geology,

1:23.4

but it's a challenging place to land in. Drift off too far one way, and they risk crashing into a mountain.

1:29.5

Too far another, and they could end up in a giant crater.

1:32.7

The lunar lander weighs 16 tons, and is notoriously difficult to control.

1:37.6

Neil Armstrong overshot the Apollo 11 landing site by more than four miles,

1:42.7

and Jack knows if they do the same today, their mission

1:45.5

may be over before it begins. He and Gene have trained hard for this moment, though, and as

1:51.1

the moon looms ever larger outside their windows, both astronauts remain calm. In just 12 minutes,

...

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