Recently, NASA fired a missile aimed at piercing a specific crater on the moon’s surface. A second stage of the rocket was designed to collect data from the lunar explosion gathering information from beneath the surface dust, in an effort to determine if there is ice on the moon.
The estimated 5-billion-year-old satellite, essential to our solar system and our very survival, may hold the seed of life if ice is discovered and scientists deem that the planet may be able to sustain some sort of scientific colonization and prolonged exploration in the future.
The eyes of humanity in classrooms, laboratories, boardrooms and the executive suites of the most powerful governments on the planet will pay close attention to this phenomenal exploration marking yet another serious milestone in the history of man’s quest for knowledge.