Moon Rocks - Apollo Missions and Osaka Expo ’70 (Part II) - Japanstones.shop

Moon Rocks - Apollo Missions and Osaka Expo ’70 (Part II)

In Part I, we explored how the Moon may have formed after a Giant Impact. This sequel turns to the stones humans actually brought home—especially the Apollo 12 samples—and the moment people in Japan saw a real Moon rock at Expo ’70 in Osaka.

Apollo Missions at a Glance

Each Apollo landing expanded human knowledge of the Moon and its stones. Here is a quick comparison of the six successful missions:

Mission Year Landing Site Key Achievement Samples Collected
Apollo 11 1969 Sea of Tranquility First human landing on the Moon 21.5 kg (≈ 47 lb)
Apollo 12 1969 Ocean of Storms Precise landing near Surveyor 3 probe 34 kg (≈ 75 lb)
Apollo 14 1971 Fra Mauro Highlands First extended geology program 42 kg (≈ 93 lb)
Apollo 15 1971 Hadley Rille / Apennine Mountains First use of Lunar Rover 77 kg (≈ 170 lb)
Apollo 16 1972 Descartes Highlands Focus on highland geology 95 kg (≈ 209 lb)
Apollo 17 1972 Taurus–Littrow Valley First geologist on the Moon (Harrison Schmitt) 110 kg (≈ 243 lb)


Apollo 12: Stones from the Ocean of Storms

In November 1969, Apollo 12 achieved the second human landing on the Moon, touching down in the Ocean of Storms with a precise approach near the Surveyor 3 probe. The crew returned 34 kg (≈ 75 lb) of lunar material—mainly basalt and breccia. Granite, common on Earth’s continents, was not among them, underscoring how different lunar geology is from Earth’s.

When Japan Saw a Moon Rock: Expo ’70 Osaka

In 1970, at the Japan World Exposition in Suita, Osaka, the USA Pavilion displayed an Apollo 12 Moon rock. Visitors queued to see the small fragment sealed under glass—an encounter that made the future feel present during Japan’s high-growth era.

Osaka Expo '70
Item Data (Expo ’70 Osaka)
Official Name Japan World Exposition (Expo ’70 Osaka)
Dates March 15 – September 13, 1970
Location Suita, Osaka (Expo ’70 Commemorative Park)
Theme “Progress and Harmony for Mankind”
Participating Countries 77
Total Visitors ≈ 64.21 million
USA Pavilion Highlight Apollo 12 Moon rock — 34 kg (≈ 75 lb)
Public Response One of the most popular exhibits; a vivid sign that the future had already arrived.


Other International Exhibits at Expo ’70

While the USA Pavilion showcased a Moon rock, other nations also brought cultural and technological treasures, highlighting the diversity of human achievement:

Country Exhibit Highlight Symbolic Meaning
USSR (Soviet Union) Luna spacecraft models and space technology Rival to Apollo, emblem of the space race
France Tapestries and modern art Dialogue between heritage and innovation
West Germany Advanced industrial machinery and design Postwar recovery and engineering prowess
United Kingdom Futuristic visions of tomorrow’s cities Optimism about urban life in the 21st century
Japan (Host) Tarō Okamoto’s Tower of the Sun Symbol of life energy and national progress

Moon Rock

Myth vs. Evidence: What the Moon Rocks Prove

On platforms like YouTube, some videos claim the Apollo landings were faked. Yet multiple lines of evidence show otherwise:

  • Moon rocks: Apollo missions returned over 382 kg (≈ 842 lb) of samples analyzed worldwide. Their chemistry differs from Earth’s surface rocks and aligns with lunar formation history.
  • Retroreflectors: Apollo 11, 14, and 15 placed laser reflectors on the Moon. They still return laser pulses from Earth today.
  • Independent tracking: Other nations—including the USSR—tracked Apollo flights. A hoax would have been readily exposed.

Why the Moon Has No Granite

Granite forms deep within a planet where water, heat, and long-running plate tectonics interact. The Moon is dry and tectonically quiet. Its stones—basalt, breccia, and anorthosite—tell a story of stillness, while Earth’s granite marks a living geology that helped create a home for life.

Stones that Bind Memory

Apollo 12’s rock is more than a specimen. It is a record of human daring—and for many in Japan, a memory of seeing the future at Expo ’70. If your family once queued to glimpse that tiny fragment, perhaps a trace of that wonder remains even now. Stone connects us across time, continents, and worlds.

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Last updated: August 27, 2025 (JST)

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