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SheopleNation
supermarket2012
Yes everybody it is quite true! Only a "foolish mortal" would DARE to think ANY differently than what this poster proposes!!! You foolish mortals and your logic. ALL OF YOU, DIRTY, DIRTY MORTALS!
Oh I am sorry, are you disgruntled? Does my difference of opinion bother you? Better get acclimated to it around here my friend.
supermarket2012
Or, perhaps it was really all about us competing with the Soviet Union, although that doesn't make sense....because the cold war didn't end till much later.
Actually it makes perfect sense. What doesn't, is how the Cold War ending much later has anything whatsoever to do with competing with the Soviets back in 1969. Feel free to explain if you like. ~$heopleNation
edit on 9-10-2013 by SheopleNation because: TypO
qmantoo
I cannot see any logical reason why we dont send robots to the Moon.
wildespace
We do, but they are orbiters, not rovers or landers. A rover, arguably, can achieve more than an orbiter, but it seems like scientists are content with the research made available with orbiters and lunar rocks brought by the Apollo missions.
SheopleNation
We need to return and start digging, there could be fossils up there
wildespace
We gained a whole lot of information about the Moon from the orbiters, as I mentioned above. It would be foolish to ignore that, and claim that only by landing humans or rovers can we achieve anything useful.
wildespace
First, we need scientifically valid arguments that life could have existed on the Moon, or that it was at least remotely habitable.
That's why there are rovers on Mars, studying the past habitability and, with the upcoming rover, searching for signs of past life - because we have good reasons to believe that Mars was habitable in the past. No such reasons for the Moon, it is and always been to all intents and purposes lifeless.
We gained a whole lot of information about the Moon from the orbiters, as I mentioned above. It would be foolish to ignore that, and claim that only by landing humans or rovers can we achieve anything useful.
we should already have a base with stored fuel and the ability to launch into space from the Moon, which would then allow us to save the much wasted fuel that is used in order to exit Earth's Atmosphere.
Not exactly a chunk and not exclusively part of Earth.
In the most popular hypothesis of the origin of the Moon, it _is_ a chunk of Earth, broken off by an huge impact.