John Young and Charles Duke Two images of Stone Mountain's station 4: Charles Duke near the Rover admiring the spectacular view; John Young working at the Rover in the barren moonscape 16-27 April 1972 One vintage chromogenic prints on fibre-based Kodak paper, 25.4 x 20.3 cm (10 x 8 in), RED NUMBERED NASA AS16-107-17446, with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on the verso (NASA Manned Spacecraft Center), and one vintage gelatin silver print on fibre-based paper, 25.4 x 20.3 cm (10 x 8 in), BLACK NUMBERED NASA AS16-110-17960, with NASA Manned Spacecraft Center caption on the verso Footnotes: Station 4 was 4 km south of the LM, near a cluster of five craters, the Cinco Crater, and marked the highest point reached on the steep slopes of Stone Mountain from where the crew had a spectacular view. 'The first place we parked, I tried to get out of the rover, and I was going to roll down the hill, it was really steep. The rover could actually climb a steeper slope than we could walk on. We were five to seven hundred feet above the valley floor. This was one of the most incredible stops we made.' Charles Duke Condition Report: Three punch holes to the edge of the photo AS16-107-17446 Some creasing to the right edge and bottom right corner of the photo AS16-110-17960 Condition Report Disclaimer
John Young and Charles Duke Two images of Stone Mountain's station 4: Charles Duke near the Rover admiring the spectacular view; John Young working at the Rover in the barren moonscape 16-27 April 1972 One vintage chromogenic prints on fibre-based Kodak paper, 25.4 x 20.3 cm (10 x 8 in), RED NUMBERED NASA AS16-107-17446, with A KODAK PAPER watermarks on the verso (NASA Manned Spacecraft Center), and one vintage gelatin silver print on fibre-based paper, 25.4 x 20.3 cm (10 x 8 in), BLACK NUMBERED NASA AS16-110-17960, with NASA Manned Spacecraft Center caption on the verso Footnotes: Station 4 was 4 km south of the LM, near a cluster of five craters, the Cinco Crater, and marked the highest point reached on the steep slopes of Stone Mountain from where the crew had a spectacular view. 'The first place we parked, I tried to get out of the rover, and I was going to roll down the hill, it was really steep. The rover could actually climb a steeper slope than we could walk on. We were five to seven hundred feet above the valley floor. This was one of the most incredible stops we made.' Charles Duke Condition Report: Three punch holes to the edge of the photo AS16-107-17446 Some creasing to the right edge and bottom right corner of the photo AS16-110-17960 Condition Report Disclaimer
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