Why can we see only one photo of earth that was taken from the moon surface?
Hey Photo hound, how about identifying for us the particular photo that you mistakenly thought was the
only one. What is its AS number?
Were you pleased to find that there were more?
Just in case you don't know, one way to find many of the photos of Earth from the lunar surface, is to:--
1. Go the the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal,
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/alsj/frame.html2. Click on the link to each landing mission, Apollo 11 first.
3. Click on the link to its Image Library.
4. Do a search for "Earth" (for Apollo 11 you could save time by paging down to or searching for film 40 -- AS11-40-**** -- the only one taken on the lunar surface).
5. Once you find a photo the includes Earth, read the caption so you understand what the photo shows (for instance, some Apollo 17 shots of Earth were taken looking up the side of a large mountain, South Massif -- a fact which fooled some hoax-believers who didn't bother reading the captions, so they prattled on needlessly about how Earth could never have been that close to the lunar surface , which was only true if they were talking about a flat and level part of the surface).
6. Note the number of the image, such as AS11-40-5924, and its link.
7. Check the photos before and after that one -- the captions won't necessarily mention Earth, but the photos might include it.
8. Repeat the procedure for Apollos 12, 14, 15, 16, and 17.
I hope that's useful and that you won't accuse me of being the same thing you said about others in your third post. But my feelings won't be hurt if you do -- we're pretty used to hoax-believers behaving like that. Perhaps they're too young to be able to help themselves.