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Earth from the Moon: A Different Perspective on the Harvest Moon
The Moon (or 'Luna' in Latin) has occupied a prominent place in myth and folklore throughout human history. From mid-August to mid-October the Moon rises at almost the same time every evening in the northern mid-latitudes. The bright disk of Luna provides enough dependable light at this time of year to allow longer days for harvesting crops--which has led to the"Harvest Moon" of numerous songs, stories, paintings and photographs. The Moon also inspired the most ambitious human endeavor to date--landing astronauts on its surface to examine our closest celestial neighbor directly.
This image from Apollo 11 shows the Earth rising over the limb of the Moon much as the Harvest Moon does from our planetary perspective. Over the stark, scarred surface of the moon, the Earth floats in the void of space, a watery jewel swathed in ribbons of clouds.
If you were alive and aware on July 20, 1969, you were probably glued to a television set somewhere on the planet--at home with your family, gazing avidly through a storefront window, or gathered with friends at a community center or vacation cottage. On that day, America and much of the world watched, awestruck, as astronauts landed on the Moon and shared with us a look back at Earth.
While the Harvest Moon has allowed humans throughout history to coax "just a little more" from the Earth's bounty before the onset of winter, images of our home from the moon helped raise awareness of the Earth as a rare (and perhaps unique) 'planetary ecosystem.' The Apollo 11 images provided a global backdrop for the building U.S. environmental movement, including a surge of citizen-led environmental cleanups in the 1960s and 70s, and implementation of key national environmental policies.
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