Surveyor 3 was now to their right, 300 feet away, gleaming in the morning sunlight. Antennas and sensors still reached upward from its tubular frame, just as they had on April 20, 1967, when the spacecraft thumped onto the moon amid blasts from its braking rockets.
Homepage with pictures.
Space Rocket History #257 – Apollo 12 – Return, Re-entry and Splashdown
Space Rocket History #256 – Apollo 12 – Leaving the Moon
Space Rocket History #255 – Apollo 12 – Lunar Liftoff
Space Rocket History #254 – Apollo 12 – Moonwalk 2 – Part 5 – Blocky Crater & Closeout
Space Rocket History #252 – Apollo 12 – Moonwalk 2 – Part 3 – Rock ‘n’ Roll at Halo Crater
Space Rocket History #251 – Apollo 12 – Moonwalk 2 – Part 2 – Bench and Sharp Craters
Space Rocket History #250 – Apollo 12 – Moonwalk 2 – Part 1 – Head Crater – Tang Ceremony
Space Rocket History #249 – Apollo 12 – Moonwalk 1 – Part 3
Space Rocket History #248 – Apollo 12 – Moonwalk 1 – Part 2 – ALSEP
Space Rocket History #247 – Apollo 12 – Moonwalk 1 – Part 1
Space Rocket History #246 – Apollo 12 – Pin Point Landing Part 2 – Right Down the Middle of the Road
Space Rocket History #245 – Apollo 12 – Pin Point Landing Part 1 – Right Down the Middle of the Road
Space Rocket History #244 – Apollo 12 – Lunar Orbit
Space Rocket History #243 – Apollo 12 – TLI and the Coast
Space Rocket History #242 – Apollo 12 – The Launch Part 2
Space Rocket History #241 – Apollo 12 – The Launch Part 1
Space Rocket History #240 – Apollo 12 – Saturn V Instrument Unit
Space Rocket History #239 – Apollo 12 – Commander Charles Conrad – Part 2
Space Rocket History #238 – Apollo 12 – Commander Charles Conrad – Part 1
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