NASA Offers Guidelines To Protect Historic Sites On The Moon

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May 24, 2012

Joshua Buck 
Headquarters, Washington                                         
202-358-1100 
jbuck@xxxxxxxx 

Alan Zack 
X Prize Foundation, Playa Vista, Calif. 
310-741-4880 
alan.zack@xxxxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 12-168

NASA OFFERS GUIDELINES TO PROTECT HISTORIC SITES ON THE MOON

WASHINGTON -- NASA and the X Prize Foundation of Playa Vista, Calif., 
announced Thursday the Google Lunar X Prize is recognizing guidelines 
established by NASA to protect lunar historic sites and preserve 
ongoing and future science on the moon. The foundation will take the 
guidelines into account as it judges mobility plans submitted by 26 
teams vying to be the first privately-funded entity to visit the 
moon. 

NASA recognizes that many spacefaring nations and commercial entities 
are on the verge of landing spacecraft on the moon. The agency 
engaged in a cooperative dialogue with the X Prize Foundation and the 
Google Lunar X Prize teams to develop the recommendations. NASA and 
the next generation of lunar explorers share a common interest in 
preserving humanity's first steps on another celestial body and 
protecting ongoing science from the potentially damaging effects of 
nearby landers. 

NASA assembled the guidelines using data from previous lunar studies 
and analysis of the unmanned lander Surveyor 3's samples after Apollo 
12 landed nearby in 1969. Experts from the historic, scientific and 
flight-planning communities also contributed to the technical 
recommendations. The guidelines do not represent mandatory U.S. or 
international requirements. NASA provided them to help lunar mission 
planners preserve and protect historic lunar artifacts and potential 
science opportunities for future missions. 

The Google Lunar X Prize will award $30 million total in prizes. First 
place will go to a privately-funded team that builds a rover which 
lands successfully land on the moon, explores it by moving at least 
one third of a mile and returns high-definition video and imagery to 
Earth. 

Additional bonus prizes will be awarded for photographing a Lunar 
Heritage, Apollo or Surveyor spacecraft site. The contest ends 
whenever all prizes are claimed or at the end of 2015. 

To view the full set of guidelines, visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/JDYo9v 

For more information about the X Prize Foundation, visit: 


http://www.xprize.org 

For more information about the Google Lunar X Prize, visit: 

http://www.googlelunarxprize.org 

For a lunar exploration timeline, visit: 


http://go.nasa.gov/Mk2Ms7 

	
-end-



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