Like when you used to actively promote that silly argument about NASA being fearful of deep moon dust
Used to? Davis BJ, I'm reading up on the squid ink, and I'll make the appropriate corrections. Are you likewise eager to correct yourself...
Like when you used to actively promote that silly argument about NASA being fearful of deep moon dust, so they put duck feet on the lunar landers.
DavisBJ, that is exactly what NASA was fearful of, and why they put those feet on the lunar lander. This narrative quotes from
NASA's own website and their official history of the lunar program, and their concern that led them to design the pod feet of the lander out of a fear that there might be enough dust that the lander might sink out of sight.
From
Real Science Friday's NASA Feared Deep Moon Dust:
* First a BEL Caller Talks to NASA's Dr. Gold: An atheist caller, Forrest from Hawaii, had previously claimed that he had spoken to a NASA scientist Dr. Thomas Gold, who had personally told him that NASA had no concern about too much dust on the moon. Forrest wanted to use this information to discredit Bob Enyart's account of NASA designing the Lunar Module with large "feet" to prevent it from sinking into dust on the moon.
* Secondly Retired Engineer Bob Ball Reports His Research & Personal Recollection: Long-time friend of BEL and retired computer engineer Bob Ball (see
Bob's TOL obituary) from Indiana confirmed through his own research and independent recollection, NASA's serious, though unwarranted, concern in the 1960s that the moon would hold a tremendous amount of dust (because they believed it would have been collecting dust for billions of years, an age, and therefore, a concern, that young-earth creationists would dispute). Ball further recounted that this concern was promoted by NASA's own Dr. Thomas Gold himself, the very man our caller Forrest says that he had spoken to, who allegedly claimed that NASA had no such concern, and especially not when they designed the Lunar Lander.
* Atheist Forrest Calls Back: Forrest states did not accept Bob Ball's report that Dr. Thomas Gold was the very astronomer who most promoted the unnecessary concern over moon dust.
* Next Caller Darrell Birkey Quotes NASA: Birkey, of Goshen, Indiana called in to quote from NASA's own website which states, "astronomer Thomas Gold asserted, however, that the apparently smooth areas on the moon were likely to be covered with a layer of fine dust several meters thick, raising the prospect that the lunar module might sink out of sight."
* Official NASA History Corroborates Creationist Account: So NASA's own historical account concludes just as Bob Enyart has surmised on the air, refuting Forrest's first specific criticism of BEL. For NASA itself states, "Spacecraft engineers at Houston's Manned Spacecraft Center, meanwhile, in spite of their real need for this information [how much dust] in
designing the lunar landing module, had to go ahead without it [without that data]." That is, NASA was designing the Lunar Module prior to its Ranger and Surveyor missions discovering that the depth of dust on the moon was negligible. So NASA gave the lunar lander large "feet" because they were pressed for time (to fulfill John Kennedy's dream of reaching the moon by the end of the decade) and so they designed the landing features so as to prevent the craft from sinking in dust.
* Anti-Creationist Bias Evident in Revisionist History: Thus, as certainly evident unless heavily biased against any creationist claim, a concern of deep moon dust was still in the minds of NASA engineers when they designed the Lunar Lander's feet, and NASA's own website falsifies Forrest's claim of Dr. Gold's "version."
* Small Amount of Moon Dust a Valid Lunar Chronometer: See also Dr. Walt Brown's
brief summary and then his
careful analysis of published data showing how much dust should be on a four-billion year old moon (a lot). Dr. Brown's calculations, which are based on actual data, raise doubt about whether Answers in Genesis is correct in its claim that creationists should
not use the moon dust argument.
-Bob Enyart