The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

Apollo rocks showed how the moon was made, and now they’re about to solve more mysteries

May 12, 2019 at 8:12 p.m. EDT
Lunar samples 15556, 60015 and 70017 in a stainless-steel processing cabinet that contains a nearly pure nitrogen atmosphere at Johnson Space Center in Houston. (Spike Johnson/For The Washington Post)

HOUSTON — The first person to set foot on the moon had one last task before he came home.

Neil Armstrong needed to pick up rocks — as many as he could carry, as interesting as he could find. The material he collected would constitute humanity’s first samples taken from another world.