#Moonrocks from Kittery #Maine.
They’re yummy but it doesn’t taste like or look like hash oil. Maybe it’s enshittified, but I don’t regret my purchase, especially because my rewards card saved me $25.
The last batch I got there was amazing, this is the first time I’ve seen them since last summer and I will try them again next time I see them. If this is how they are now it’ll be an “only if on sale” purchase.
Emailed Robert Pearlman (CollectSpace) and Joseph R. Gutheinz about the National Museum rock and they say it is not the missing Apollo-11 rock India received. Another image from Commons.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Moon_stone_in_Rashtrapati_Bhawan_Museum.jpg
Apollo-11 Moon rocks came to India in 1969 and were displayed to public.
But this report suggests Apollo-11 might be errr missing..
https://web.archive.org/web/20120331162718/http://outlookindia.com/printarticle.aspx?280382
National Museum told Outlook they didn't have it but then what is it that on display in previous post?? Bad cataloging?
And another one displayed at National Museum, New Delhi. Not sure from which mission it is. Could be Apollo-11 ?
📷 u/monachopsis___
Direct: https://old.reddit.com/r/india/comments/13rgr4b/national_museum_new_delhi_must_visit_for_a_lot_of/
We have Apollo-17 Goodwill Moon rocks at display in Parliament Museum, New Delhi. But it is not open for general public AFAIK.
📷: Himanshu Pandey
Nice article by Sandhya Ramesh on PRL.
"Ahmedabad moon lab is waiting for Chandrayaan-4 samples. It has already studied Apollo rocks"
Rare images of Apollo mission moon rock samples included.
The Physical Research Laboratory in Ahmedabad is the only other Indian institute, apart from TIFR Mumbai, to work with lunar samples. It’s collaborating with NASA, Russia’s Roscosmos, and Japan’s JAXA.