Eugene Cernan, Harrison Schmitt or Ronald Evans The near Full Moon during the homeward journey, seen for the last time by humans from a perspective not visible from Earth 7-19 December 1972 Vintage chromogenic print on resin-coated Kodak paper, 25.4 x 20.3 cm (10 x 8 in), [NASA photo no AS17-152-23311], with THIS PAPER MANUFACTURED BY KODAK watermarks on the verso (NASA/North American Rockwell) Footnotes: "I look at it very three-dimensionally. I mean I can look beyond the moon. I can see the three dimensions. I think, prior to going there, and I think most people just look at it as something flat out there in the night sky. But I look at it as a sphere. I can feel the depth of it. I know that it is in inner space. I mean, I know that it's not at the end of that blackness." Eugene Cernan
Eugene Cernan, Harrison Schmitt or Ronald Evans The near Full Moon during the homeward journey, seen for the last time by humans from a perspective not visible from Earth 7-19 December 1972 Vintage chromogenic print on resin-coated Kodak paper, 25.4 x 20.3 cm (10 x 8 in), [NASA photo no AS17-152-23311], with THIS PAPER MANUFACTURED BY KODAK watermarks on the verso (NASA/North American Rockwell) Footnotes: "I look at it very three-dimensionally. I mean I can look beyond the moon. I can see the three dimensions. I think, prior to going there, and I think most people just look at it as something flat out there in the night sky. But I look at it as a sphere. I can feel the depth of it. I know that it is in inner space. I mean, I know that it's not at the end of that blackness." Eugene Cernan
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