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San Jose Missions ended in 1981.
Combat Missions ended on 2002-04-17.
The Apollo missions were ended by NASA due to budget constraints and shifting priorities. The final mission was Apollo 17 in 1972. NASA shifted its focus to the development of the Space Shuttle program after the Apollo missions.
It never ended. There are now new missions.
the mission was shut down by the Mexican government.
All of the Mercury missions ended (as did all missions prior to the Shuttle Program) via capsule splashdown and recovery by a Navy carrier in the Pacific Ocean.
The Apollo mission ended in December 1972.
The two missions to Mars that ended in failure are the Mars Climate Orbiter in 1999, which crashed due to a navigation error, and the Mars Polar Lander in 1999, which likely crashed during its descent.
It has been two shuttle missions that has ended with death. The first one was the space shuttle Challenger, it exploded about 73 seconds from the launch in 1986, and then it was the shuttle Columbia that was torn apart when they entered the earth atmosphere in 2003. All of the crew died in both of the "crashes".
go to the Chum Bucket and click kitchen and get working
I would say that for the large majority the missions of California ended due to the Westward Expansion (of America) which in turn weakened the influence and power of these missions who were put in place under the (Catholic) Spanish rule. Furthermore, when California was purchased by the United States these missions were under a new authority that did not have a national religion.
The Challenger missions, officially known as Space Shuttle Challenger missions, flew from April 4, 1983 until January 28, 1986. The final Challenger mission, STS-51-L, tragically ended in the destruction of the shuttle 73 seconds after liftoff.