University of Bayreuth, Press release No. 142/2023 - 29 September 2023
University of Bayreuth examines Moon rocks of the Apollo missions 16 and 17
They were formed on the Moon more than three billion years ago, brought back to the Earth about 50 years ago, and recently arrived on the campus of the University of Bayreuth: samples of Moon rocks collected by NASA Apollo missions 16 and 17. The US national space agency has made them available to the Bavarian Research Institute of Experimental Geochemistry and Geophysics (BGI) of the University of Bayreuth for scientific investigations.
UBT / Chr. Wißler.
UBT / Chr. Wißler.
UBT / Chr. Wißler.
A. Bouvier.
Photos (see above) for download
- Ran Zhao M.Sc. and Prof. Dr. Audrey Bouvier (from left) in a cleanroom laboratory of the BGI in preparation for the investigation of extraterrestrial rocks.Photo: UBT / Chr. Wißler.
- Ran Zhao M.Sc., doctoral student at BGI, takes a first look at the lunar rocks.Photo: UBT / Chr. Wißler.
- Polished sections of the lunar rock samples from Apollo missions 16 and 17 at the Bavarian Research Institute of Experimental Geochemistry and Geophysics (BGI).Photo: UBT / Chr. Wißler.
- A slice of a lunar impact breccia meteorite that hit the Sahara Desert about 26,000 years ago.Photo: A. Bouvier.