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PROJECT APOLLO: THE CONCLUSION
Apollo 17 Samples
The Lunar Sample Analysis Planning Team met at MSC on January 29 to plan
for allocation of Apollo 17 samples. In keeping with the custom
established on the previous two missions, five key samples were released
very early for age-dating, including the orange soil that had so excited
Jack Schmitt. During February samples were sent to 116 of 185 principal
investigators, even before the preliminary examination was completed, so
that some results could be reported to the fourth Lunar Science
Conference scheduled for March.5
Schmitt's selection and documentation of samples taken from the large
boulders examined at Taurus-Littrow presented a new problem for the
team. Considering that issuing samples to investigators working in
isolation would waste a unique opportunity to study the relationships
between different rock types, the team recommended that each boulder (or
set of possibly related boulders) be examined by a small
interdisciplinary group working in dose collaboration. After these
groups had examined the samples and extracted as much information as
possible, the specimens would be cut up and distributed for study.6
5. Minutes, Apollo Lunar Sample Analysis
Planning Team meeting, Jan. 29-Feb. 2, 1973.
6. Ibid.
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