In the South Pacific Ocean, at 15°47′S 165°9′W
The twelve men who walked on the lunar surface were: From Apollo 11: Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin Apollo 12: Alan Bean, Pete Conrad. Apollo 14: Alan Shepard, Edgar Mitchell. Apollo 15: James Irwin, David Scott Apollo 16: John Young, Charlie Duke Apollo 17: Harrison Schmitt, Gene Cernan
The ocean warms more slowly than the land.
1. Neil Armstrong, Apollo 11 Commander 2. Buzz Aldrin, Apollo 11 Lunar Module Pilot 3. Charles "Pete" Conrad, Apollo 12 Commander 4. Alan Bean, Apollo 12 Lunar Module Pilot 5. Alan Shepard, Apollo 14 Commander 6. Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14 Lunar Module Pilot
An earthquake in the ocean is dangerous than on land because in the ocean if it occurs it can generate an earthquake which can cause more destruction than an earthaquake on land
As far as is known to the public, a total of 12 human beings landed on the moon, on six missions between 1969 and 1972. They were 11 military men and one civilian, and all were Americans, trained and launched by the US's NASA administration as part of the Apollo program.
Apollo 12 landed in the Pacific Ocean, about 600 kilometers southeast of American Samoa.
Apollo 13 landed in the Pacific Ocean
The Apollo 11 splashdown occurred on July 24, 1969 at 16:50:35 UTC (12:50pm EDT)
Apollo 11 did land in the sea, which is the Pacific Ocean.
The Pacific Ocean .
Apollo 12 landed on the Moon's Ocean of Storms, which is situated on the southwestern region of the moon's visible side. The landing site was chosen for its relatively flat and smooth terrain, making it an ideal location for a safe landing.
Apollo 12 landed on the moon on November 1969.
Land where the moon or on earth, if the earth it was the Pacific ocean.
It didn't. Apollo 16 was first to land in a highlands area. It landed in the Descartes highlands area on April 20, 1972 at 9:23pm E.S.T.
No the astronauts to land on the moon in Apollo 12 were Charles Conrad and Alan Bean.
Apollo 11 astronauts returned safely in the pacific ocean.
Apollo 7 did not land on the Moon; it was the first crewed mission in NASA's Apollo program and orbited the Earth for 11 days in 1968. The crew splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean upon completing their mission.