The Apollo mission 14 launch date was January 31, 1971.
when it was ready.
Apollo 14 was launched on January 31, 1971. This mission was the third crewed mission to land on the moon and was commanded by astronaut Alan Shepard.
Apollo 12, the second moon landing mission, launched on November 17th 1969 (it landed on the moon on November 19).
1969 (november 14 was the exact launch day)
Apollo 17 left the moon on December 14, 1972. It was the final mission of NASA's Apollo program and remains the most recent manned moon landing to date.
when it was ready.
Apollo 14
To EXPLORE.
Apollo 14 was launched on January 31, 1971. This mission was the third crewed mission to land on the moon and was commanded by astronaut Alan Shepard.
Apollo 12, the second moon landing mission, launched on November 17th 1969 (it landed on the moon on November 19).
1969 (november 14 was the exact launch day)
Apollo 14 conducted many scientific experiments. Information on these can be found at the below link.
I assume you're referring to the manned lunar landings. Those launch dates are as follows: Apollo 11 - July 20, 1969 Apollo 12 - November 14, 1969 Apollo 14 - January 31, 1971 Apollo 15 - July 26, 1971 Apollo 16 - April 16, 1972 Apollo 17 - December 7, 1972
Apollo 17 left the moon on December 14, 1972. It was the final mission of NASA's Apollo program and remains the most recent manned moon landing to date.
The lunar module used during the Apollo 14 mission was named "Antares".
No. Some Apollo missions got held down on overheat. Apollo 14 missed and failed the mission. Also, Apollo 14 got crashed, but ran down to a %17 air tank! It landed safely on the crust of the Earth. But in space, it had suspension problem and the boosters turned back to %30 turbo.
Apollo 13 occurred between Apollo 12 and Apollo 14. The numbering of the Apollo missions was determined by their launch sequence, so skipping directly from Apollo 12 to Apollo 14 would have disrupted this order. Additionally, each mission had specific objectives and goals, so skipping missions would have meant missing out on valuable scientific data and progress in the Apollo program.