yes it's from AS17-147-22572 – AS17-147-22590
According to the captions for each individual photo, AS17-147-22589 and 90 are from another pan taken from a different position.
The ALSJ's details under Apollo 17's Assembled Panoramas:
https://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a17/images17.html#Pans120:48:56 Jack's Color ALSEP Pan ( 478k )
The frames are AS17-147-22569 to 22588. USGS B&W assembly from the Professional Paper in a ( 1.7Mb ) PDF document produced by Brian McInall.
High-resolution assemblies of frames 22569-80 ( view to the north, 8 Mb ) and frames 22580-88 ( view to the south, 5.6 Mb ) by Eric Jones.
The first pan linked (478k) is an early black-and-white version, and the second one was also done before computer graphics, but the last two are well worth a look. High resolution colour expertly stitched by ALSJ author Eric Jones.
In the middle of Eric's pan of frames 22569-80 there is a rock just beyond and to the left of Gene and the rover, and showing over the top of it is a white drill stem rack, which Jack kicked over when he later did his spectacular arse-up (below).
Way beyond the centre of that rock and just above the local darker background, on the light side of the distant massif, is Turning Point Rock which Cernan and Schmitt drove around on the Rover and took photos of. And off to the right of that rock and a little higher up, is Tracy's Rock at Station 6. From there another panorama was taken looking back this way which includes the distant LM just to the right of the top of Tracy's Rock.
The distance is a little out of focus in this ALSEP pan because the camera was focused for the nearby equipment on the ground, but other photos taken from the ALSEP site show the distant rocks on the massif more clearly. There are also many black-and-white photos of them taken by Jack as they drove toward Turning Point Rock.
Jack's tumble:
121:00:59 Cernan: Does it feel like it's loosening up at all?
[On this stroke, Jack pushes so hard on the handle that his toes come up about a foot off the ground.]
[Schmitt - "I was putting every bit of weight and momentum into it that I could."]
121:01:02 Schmitt: Not yet. (Laughs) Excuse me.
121:01:05 Cernan: No, go ahead. (Laughter)
[Jack loses his balance and spins to the ground; he kicks the rack again on the way down.]
121:01:11 Cernan: (Both laughing) Okay, okay, okay.
[Cernan - "This part - where Jack spins around and falls ass-over teakettle - was the funniest thing in the world."]