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After 22 hours in the moondust, the Apollo 11 astronauts climbed into the lander’s ascent stage and returned to the command module for the trip back to Earth.—IEEE Spectrum, 8 July 2019 Schwartz added some artificial moondust—regolith—to certain organoid tubes to approximate its impact combined with that of radiation.—Dhruv Khullar, The New Yorker, 10 Feb. 2025 Not only that, said Atkin, moondust is chockfull of heavy metals and other toxins that would kill a seed or stunt a plant’s growth; the moon’s microgravity can also impair a plant’s ability to effectively take up nutrients and oxygen, causing what’s known as root zone hypoxia.—Miriam Fauzia, Discover Magazine, 10 Apr. 2024 Coated in moondust, Gene Cernan waits in the Apollo 17 lunar module in 1972.—Discover Magazine, 14 May 2019 European Union: The European Space Agency plans to mine lunar regolith — moondust — for valuable resources like oxygen and water by 2025.—Jake Parks, Discover Magazine, 20 May 2019 Furthermore, the silver base coat plays on the otherworldly theme, eliciting images of star and moondust.—Sara Miranda, Allure, 23 Dec. 2021 Will the study of moondust give us clues to the biochemical origin of life?—Dan Q. Posin, Popular Mechanics, 11 Mar. 2021 Perhaps the program’s true legacy is etched not in moondust but in silicon.—Stephen Witt, WIRED, 24 June 2019
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