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TERRY SLEZAK Hand Signed Autograph 4X4 PHOTO - 1st PERSON TO TOUCH MOON DUST

$ 0

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Signed: Yes
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Condition: VERY BOLD AUTOGRAPH - GOOD CONDITION
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Modified Item: No

    Description

    NASA photographer. First person to touch moon dust TERRY SLEZAK Hand Signed 4X4 PHOTO. . is Hand Signed by TERRY SLEZAK .  %100 Authentic Autograph ! The Autograph is BOLD & Looks AMAZING. Is in GOOD condition & is a High Quality photo.  RARE AUTOGRAPH ITEM . Will be shipped SUPER FAST to you & will be Well packaged . I will ship to you . The SAME DAY you pay :) YES... I even ship on Saturday . Payment MUST be made in 3 days or less after this listing ends ! Combined s&h is Extra each additional listing . In the 3 day Period . Check out my other Low priced autographs & my Fantastic Feedback :) Ad my store to your follow list . I do list NEW Low priced Autographs EVERY DAY ! Upon Request . I do offer my Lifetime Guarantee COA . Just message me after your purchase . Thank you :) Amanda
    NASA photographer Terry Slezak shows off the moon dust on his fingers. While the Apollo 11 astronauts waited in quarantine after returning home from the moon, a NASA photographer accidentally became the first person, other than the astronauts themselves, to touch moon dust. Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins splashed back down on Earth on July 24, 1969, and were quickly whisked away to quarantine, where they spent the next three weeks being evaluated in case they brought home any "moon bugs." With the astronauts in quarantine, NASA staffers began decontaminating and sorting the astronauts' equipment and the samples that they'd collected.Space is supported by its audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate co Now, while Aldrin and Armstrong were on the moon, they took photos using different types of cameras and film, capturing each other and their surrounding lunar environment. But as the astronauts were nearing the end of their extravehicular activity and heading back to climb the ladder back into the lunar module, Armstrong dropped one of the film magazines — a chamber that holds film. He picked it up, packed it into a canister and stored it with the rest of the film. Aldrin then left a handwritten note on the canister containing the dropped magazine, informing whoever handled it that the magazine's surface was dusted with lunar soil. Unfortunately, when NASA photographer Terry Slezak was unwrapping the film canisters, he didn't heed Aldrin's note. Slezak and his colleagues began unpacking the film, which was double-bagged in plastic containers, from behind a "biological barrier," Slezak recalled in an interview with NASA. Slezak opened the canister with the dropped magazine, and "in there was a note from Buzz Aldrin. He said, 'This is the magazine that Neil [A. Armstrong] had dropped on the surface, but this was the most important magazine,'" Slezak recalled in the interview. "When I pulled it out it was all covered in this black material — looked like lampblack, almost — it was really dark black with little bright speckly things, which turned out to be little bits of glass from the lunar surface. So everybody said, 'What is that?' I said, 'It's Moon dust. That's the only place it's been.' So they had to shoot a picture of me with the Moon dust on my hand," Slezak said. Slezak's hands were covered in black lunar soil, and NASA scientists weren't sure if the astronauts could have brought back moon bugs. So, not only did Slezak have to be photographed with his moon-dusted hands, he also had to go through an intense decontamination process. As Slezak explained, "according to protocol, the other people in the room had to leave and I had to strip off my clothing and clean off all of the work surfaces with Clorox bleach, then go to the showers. I didn't really think too much about it at the time. The only thing I was concerned with was this dust, which is so abrasive, it's like carborundum [silicon carbide (SiC)], and I was thinking, 'If this stuff has gotten into the magazine, the film is going to be all scratched.' So that's really what I was worried about." Luckily, the moon dust didn't make Slezak sick, and the NASA photographer will forever be one of the first people to ever touch moon dust.